Let's be honest — buying digital files from a marketplace you've never used before feels sketchy. You hand over crypto, a file appears, and you just have to hope it's what was advertised. We get it. That's exactly why we built the tools we did, and why this guide exists.
Here's how to do it properly.
First, make an account — takes 30 seconds
Go to buuza.net/auth/register, pick a username and password, done. No email verification, no waiting around. You're in.
Before you spend a single cent, look at the seller
This is the part most people skip and then complain about later. When you open a listing, don't just read the description — scroll down and look at who's selling it.
A few things I always check:
- Do they have a verification badge? If yes, the Buuza team has already vetted them. That's not nothing.
- How many sales have they made? A seller with 2 sales is a different risk than one with 400.
- Read the reviews. Not just the star rating — actually read what people wrote. One negative review that says "file was corrupted" tells you more than fifty 5-stars.
If something feels off, trust that feeling. There are plenty of solid sellers on here.
Making the actual purchase
Hit the Purchase button on any listing and you'll be walked through a crypto payment via NowPayments. You pick your coin, you get a wallet address and an exact amount to send. Send it, wait a few minutes for the network to confirm, and the file drops into your account automatically.
One thing that catches people — send the exact amount shown. Not roughly that amount. The exact amount. And double-check you're on the right network if you're sending something like USDT, because USDT runs on multiple chains and sending on the wrong one is a bad time.
Your files don't disappear
Once you've bought something, it lives under Marketplace → Purchases permanently. You can re-download whenever. This isn't like some sketchy site where the link dies in 24 hours.
Talk to the seller if something's wrong
Buuza has a messaging system for a reason. If what you received isn't what was described, message the seller before assuming the worst. Most issues get sorted out that way. If they go quiet or refuse to help, that's what the report system is for.
Two features worth using from day one
The Wishlist is genuinely useful — drop anything you're considering into it and come back later. Prices don't change, but it saves you the hassle of hunting for the same listing again.
Also: follow sellers you like. When they post new listings, you'll see them. It's how you stop missing good stuff.