The headline sounds wild, and those posts are everywhere—but pause before you click. Some feeds urge you to look immediately, claiming there are leaked photos of Sophie Rayworth. Before you fall for it, I’ll show you a fast five-step test you can use to spot fake images in under five seconds, plus one small background clue most people completely miss. Stay with me until the end, because the final tip is the quickest giveaway of all.
The truth is, viral shock posts care more about clicks than facts. They’re designed to make you react before you think. Big claims spread fast, but many of these “leaks” are edited images or AI face swaps. Something often feels off—the lighting, the proportions, the background—but it’s hard to explain why. That’s about to change.
Step one: hairlines and facial edges. Look closely at the ears and hairline. Real photos have soft, natural transitions. If the edges look jagged, sharp, or cut out, that’s a red flag.





