The Yaytseslav ‘Come With Me’ Ghana videos have exploded across social media, with the Russian guy pulling women in using nothing but a couple of straightforward lines that somehow work every time.
In clip after clip, Yaytseslav Trahov approaches women at the Accra Mall or on bustling streets, flashes a quick smile, and utters the magical words: “Come with me.” Or sometimes, “I want to see you today.” And just like that, a surprising number of them say yes.
Some pause what they’re doing, cancel their plans, and head off with him right then. One compilation making the rounds shows a lady in a bright dress breaking into a little dance after he says it, laughing as she agrees to tag along. Another has her telling her friends she’ll catch up later before jumping in a car with the stranger.
These moments look so casual on screen. There are no lengthy conversations or grand gestures. He keeps it simple, almost too simple, and the camera – hidden in those sunglasses he wears nonstop – catches every second. The videos started popping up more in the last week, compiled from his time in Ghana.
People are sharing them on TikTok, X, and private groups, racking up millions of views. Some edits string together ten or fifteen approaches back to back, with text overlays like “He said three words” or “Ghana edition”.
THE RUSSIAN GUY 🇷🇺 (YAYTSESLAV) CORE ❗️❗️😂😂
All what you missed pic.twitter.com/iK0dDMq6q9— Bofrot1cedi (@bofrot1cedi) February 13, 2026
What stands out is how fast it happens. In one, he spots a group of three women near the mall entrance. He chats for maybe 30 seconds, points to one, and says, “Come with me.”
She checks her phone, smiles, and follows. Her friends wave her off like it’s no big deal. In another from outside a supermarket, he tells a woman in jeans and a top that he wants to see her later that evening.
She nods, adjusts her bag, and they’re walking together. The editing makes it feel seamless, but the real shock is how little resistance there is.
Ghanaians have mixed feelings about it all. Plenty are angry, calling it disrespectful to the women and a bad look for the country. “One obroni says, ‘Come with me,’ and they’re gone? We need to do better,” one comment read under a popular post.
Others point to tougher times, saying money or the excitement of a foreigner plays a part. A few even defend the ladies, arguing it’s their choice and no one forced anything. But the hidden recordings change the game.
Those full versions, some behind paywalls on Telegram, have fuelled the fire because the women didn’t know they were being filmed the whole time.
Yaytseslav, real name Vyacheslav Trahov, has done this in other spots too – Kenya, South Africa – but the Ghana ones hit different. His TikTok page went private after the heat built up, but copies keep surfacing.
In one fresh leak, he approaches a woman carrying shopping bags. “Come with me,” he says with that accent. She laughs, does a quick spin, and agrees. The clip ends with them heading toward his hotel area. Comments under it range from shock to jokes about adopting the “come with me” line locally.
Not every approach lands, though. A couple of videos show women shutting him down quick. One pair at the mall barely lets him finish before walking away, one saying she’s married.
Those get cheered online, with people calling the ladies sharp for spotting the play early. It balances the narrative a bit, showing not everyone falls for the quick invite.
The whole thing ties into bigger worries. Privacy experts say secretly taping people in private settings breaks rules here, and the Cyber Security Authority is already looking into it.
Calls for his arrest are loud, especially from voices like media personality MzGee, who wants police to step in.
For many watching, it’s more than just entertainment. It raises questions about trust in public spaces, African women’s characters and how quickly some connections form, and what happens when those moments get shared online for views. Mall security has noticed more caution from shoppers lately.
Yaytseslav himself hasn’t said much lately. His accounts went quiet, and any older posts from Europe or elsewhere got buried under the Ghana drama.
As the story spreads further—now picking up steam in Nigeria and beyond—the conversation keeps shifting. Some see it as harmless fun that got out of hand. Others view it as straight exploitation, especially with the paid clips and the way it paints local women. Either way, these Yaytseslav ‘Come With Me’ Ghana videos have people talking, arguing, and rethinking how strangers interact in everyday spots.
The saga isn’t fading anytime soon. With more leaks continuing to drop and authorities circling, this Russian visitor’s short time in Ghana has left a lasting mark.


















