I've wasted money on cook groups before. Paid the sub, got the Discord invite, and found a ghost town with monitors that pinged five minutes after everyone else already copped. So when I came across Retail.go, I was ready to be underwhelmed.
I wasn't.
This is one of the more legitimate European reselling communities I've come across. The infrastructure is real, the monitors are genuinely fast, and the member feedback is unusually consistent for a group of this size.
Still, there are things you should understand before you commit. Prices are in Czech koruna, the community skews heavily European, and this isn't the kind of group you join and immediately profit from without putting in some work.
Here's what I found after going through everything.
👉 Check current pricing and join Retail.go here
Retail.go is a European cook group operating on Whop since 2022. At last count, it had just over 1,200 store members across its plans. The pitch is straightforward: they built their own custom monitor network (300+ monitors, according to their listings) while actively reselling themselves, and now they're letting paying members tap into that same infrastructure.
There are three products available:
Tickets (1,990 CZK/month): Focused entirely on ticket reselling. Custom monitors for Ticketmaster, AXS, and Eventim across all regions.
Sneakers + Alternative (1,290 CZK/month): Sneaker drops, Nike and SNKRS stock number access, and alternative reselling channels.
All in (2,490 CZK/month): Everything combined. Sneakers, tickets, and alternative, all in one plan.
At the time I checked, 2,490 CZK worked out to roughly 100 to 110 euros per month depending on exchange rates. For context, many UK and US cook groups charge $150 to $200 for comparable access. The pricing here is on the lower end for what's being offered, especially given the monitor coverage.
Most people join cook groups for one thing: speed. If your monitor pings you after the bot users have already cleaned out inventory, you're just getting a notification that you missed something. That's not useful. That's cruel.
I know the feeling. You're watching a Taylor Swift presale, refreshing Ticketmaster manually, thinking maybe this time you'll get through. You don't. Someone else's script ran circles around you three seconds after the queue opened.
Retail.go's monitors are the actual value proposition here. They've built custom tools for Ticketmaster, AXS, and Eventim covering all regions, plus their own "Lowkey" custom monitors for situations where the main platforms aren't applicable. For sneakers, they're pulling Nike SNKRS stock numbers, which is a real edge for knowing when a drop is real versus a ghost release.
300+ custom monitors is a meaningful number. Most mid-tier groups are running off shared public feeds or lightly modified open-source tools. Building and maintaining proprietary monitors takes actual development effort and ongoing cost. The fact that they claim to be active resellers themselves (not just group operators) makes it more plausible that these tools are actively maintained, because their own income depends on them working.
263 reviews. Every single one is five stars. Not a single review below five.
I'll be honest: that kind of uniformity makes me pause. On most platforms, even genuinely excellent products collect a few threes or fours from people who had off experiences.
That said, when I read through the individual reviews rather than just the aggregate, the feedback is specific enough to feel real. Members describe fast pings, helpful moderators who assist with technical setup, detailed tutorials for beginners on navigating ticket platforms, and a community that was actively helpful for people who came in with no prior reselling experience.
One verified buyer wrote that the restock bot was "fast, accurate, and makes securing tickets so much easier." Another mentioned they'd secured multiple tickets they "would've definitely missed otherwise." A third specifically called out the value: paying relatively little compared to other groups of lower quality.
You can read through the full Retail.go member reviews on Whop and judge for yourself. The Tickets product alone has 236 reviews, which is a substantial feedback base for a niche community.
Coming in as someone who's used other European cook groups, a few things stood out to me.
The tutorial library for ticket platforms was more thorough than I expected. A lot of groups assume you already know how to set up accounts, manage queues, and handle payment profiles across different platforms. Retail.go apparently walks you through it, which matters if you're newer to structured ticket copping rather than just clicking fast manually.
The 24/7 support claim is one that lots of groups make and few deliver on. Based on member feedback, moderators here seem to follow through on it, including help with event-specific strategy, not just generic troubleshooting. That's a real differentiator. There's a difference between "DM us and we'll reply eventually" and someone actually helping you figure out the best copping approach for a specific high-demand event before the queue opens.
Join Retail.go and see the infrastructure for yourself
Quick note on the Czech koruna: prices vary slightly with exchange rates, but here's an approximate guide at the time I checked.
Sneakers + Alternative: 1,290 CZK/month (approximately 52 to 56 EUR)
Tickets: 1,990 CZK/month (approximately 80 to 86 EUR)
All in: 2,490 CZK/month (approximately 100 to 108 EUR)
All plans are monthly renewals. There's no annual option listed, and no lifetime plan, which is pretty standard for active cook groups (the infrastructure costs are ongoing, so it makes sense they don't offer one-time pricing).
The All in plan works out to roughly 27 to 30 EUR more than buying Tickets alone, which is a reasonable premium if you want the sneaker side as well. If your primary interest is one vertical, the standalone plans are the smarter starting point.
Verify the current pricing directly before committing. Exchange rates move, and Whop sometimes shows welcome discounts on first visit, so the number you see may be slightly lower than what I've listed here.
This group is well-suited for you if you're based in Europe, targeting high-demand events and sneaker drops, and want access to proprietary monitors rather than the same feeds everyone else is running off of. The tutorial resources make it accessible if you're relatively new to structured reselling, but the infrastructure is sophisticated enough for experienced copers too.
The community is also genuinely active. 1,247 members isn't massive, which means it's not so oversaturated that every member is competing for the same limited inventory slots. That matters more than people realize.
On the other hand: if you're primarily reselling in the US market, the European focus means some of the platform coverage and regional knowledge won't apply directly to your situations. And like any cook group, this is not a passive income machine. You still need to show up, understand the tools, and execute. The monitors give you an edge; they don't do the whole job.
One area that has room to grow: there's no mention of any guide or infrastructure for newer markets beyond the three core platforms. As ticket platforms diversify, that could become relevant, but it's a minor point at this stage of the group's development.
See what the All in plan includes before you decide
300+ custom proprietary monitors across Ticketmaster, AXS, and Eventim
Active resellers running the group, not just operators
Strong verified review base with specific, credible feedback
Tiered pricing lets you start with just the vertical you need
Tutorial support for beginners on platform setup
Responsive moderation with apparent event-specific strategy guidance
Community size is large enough to be active but not so large it's oversaturated
On the other side: pricing in CZK adds a small conversion step for non-Czech buyers, the group's strength is Europe-focused so US-centric resellers may find less direct relevance, and the perfect review score is worth approaching with eyes open (though the feedback content itself reads credibly).
Think back to that last time you sat in a queue, got through after 45 minutes, and found nothing left in your size. Or paid for a ticket at 3x face value on the secondary market because you just couldn't get through. That's the problem this group is built to solve, and from everything I've been able to verify, the infrastructure is actually capable of solving it.
The combination of proprietary monitors, active operator involvement, genuine community support, and reasonable pricing relative to UK and US alternatives puts Retail.go in a tier above most European cook groups I've encountered. The Tickets product in particular, with 236 five-star reviews, has enough real-world validation to take seriously.
My recommendation: if ticket or sneaker reselling is something you're actively pursuing in Europe, the entry price for the standalone plans is low enough that the first successful flip covers it. Start with the plan that matches your primary focus, put in the setup time their tutorials walk you through, and actually use the monitors when drops go live.
Join Retail.go now and check for any welcome discount on your first visit
Quick note: reselling involves real market risk and results vary significantly based on individual effort, platform conditions, and the specific events you target. Nothing here is financial or professional advice. Do your own due diligence before subscribing.