The error message quoted (which may have been just a sarcastic paraphrase) is somewhat typical of messages posted by lesser kinds of malicious "scammers" on their own sites, to which several kinds of malware may redirect your browser. The "Good Luck" tag especially has been seen with several older malware infections, when viral attacks used to be ego trips to break people's machines.
The "Good Luck" thing has fallen into rare usage more recently, since "modern scammers" don't want to tip you off that they're invading your machine to make money.
A fairly common "phish" is to induce you to "click something" that says "get rich quick and be sexually prolific and successful" but that actually gives a "permission to install" a small worm that rediricts your browser to a site that mimics one you intend, but that is actually created by the scammer to attempt to get you to divulge personal information, or that allows the phony site to download additional "spyware" to your machine.
Since anyone can "view source" and copy the page description for almost any site, the mimic part is trivial, but if you don't visit a site for which the scammer has prepared a "replica page" the initial malware may just pick a "frequently visited" page from the favorites list on your computer, redirect that shortcut to a dummy site name, and give a phony "error message" to distract you while the additional download is dropped.
Bad spelling and illiterate grammar is also a common characteristic of scammers.