When most of us get out of a relationship, we like to wish our ex well dead. But did this guy take it too far by inflicting “living hell” onto his ex-boyfriend? Matthew Hendrick is now suing Grindr after his ex (who he also met on Grindr), created numerous fake accounts on the app using his photos, and sent hundreds of horny gaylords to his apartment and place of work – a restaurant in Midtown, NY.

Imagine all these men turning up wanting the sausage, and Hendrick’s is all like, “sir, we’re actually a vegan establish… Oh.”

It started in October 2015, when Hendricks would be confronted with three or four men a day. But that rapidly increased to eight or nine. Is that all? The Clapham House was like a revolving door of men most weekends. We’re gonna jump to the conclusion that these were all deluded camels (i.e: so thirsty they should have humps of water), as we can think of a lot worse things than having dick delivered to your door and you don’t even need to do the leg-work.

[RELATED: Grindr Troll Harasses his Rejectors SIX YEARS later]

Then his ex started giving out his number, so he’d receive dirty texts and unsolicited dick pics. UGH, HELL! In fact, that’s exactly what hell is: dick pics and sexting. But then the profiles got gradually more harmful, claiming Hendricks was interested in bareback, orgies and drugs – and in turn, the horny gaylords got more assertive, and even aggressive.

His ex even discussed enacting a rape fantasy with this random, telling him that Hendricks would “say no when meaning yes” when he turned up to his house, leading the recipient to attack Hendricks in his own home. DAMN, GIRL. That’s fucked up. Creative… but fucked up.

After making 50 calls of complaint to Grindr, he’s now taking it to the court of law. “A malicious user is just running amok using their product as a weapon,” says attorney Goldberg. “Grindr can control that, and they’re not.”

[RELATED: Grindr and Scruff are Turning us into Sex Addicts]

Hendricks claimed the total amount of men rocking up to his ends wants a piece of the action was nearly 700. But even after a judge signed an injunction Friday to force Grindr to block the fake profiles, they have yet to go away—Herrick says that at least 24 men have come to his home and work since then.

“My entire life has been stolen from me. My privacy has been taken from me. I’m humiliated daily,” he said. “It’s a living hell.”

[H/t: NNN]