Avantages
Two things on the "good" side: - Salary is quite high; just not high enough to pay off even in the short term. - Your team mates are really nice folks, but they will eventually escape or get baked too. Of course after writing "the cake is a lie" on some wall.
Inconvénients
tl;dr: stay away. Wefox is pretty much like THAT videogame where a rogue AI kept motivating you to do meaningless tests one after another with the promise of a delicious and moist cake that was never delivered in the end. Except this is no videogame, this is real life. And it's not funny. They'll promise that you'll be working on a moonshot project with AI, robotic automation, big data and all the fancy words that'll get you onboard. They just mean that their back-office is prehistoric and needs to be digitalized. They'll promise that your code will reach production and people will use it, but you'll keep writing isolated features without specs one day and rewrite them the next one because they just have no clue and changed their minds. They'll promise a PO that will unravel business logic and provide specs, but they won't hire them. They won't even open a hiring process. Because there's no logic in their business. They'll promise that in the meantime the CTO himself will take care of the project. Good luck talking to him, he's very busy being one of Forbes' 30 under 30 and still he refuses to delegate. They'll promise that your team and its workload will be stable -even if there's no goal, no PO, no specs, no lead...-, but they will eventually move you to another team so your skills are put to better use. And then another team. And yet another one. They'll promise you that there won't be mass layoffs because of the Covid situation, but there are; just not because of Covid. You'll never know the real reason, though. Maybe something to do with all of the above. In the end, just like in THAT videogame, you'll be left with two choices: either run away or wait and get baked. I mean fired.