The Lucky Football Ponzi scam has been exposed as a fraud.
I’m aware of two domains used by Lucky Football: “lucky66.com” and “luckyfootball1.com.”
On May 6th, 2022, “lucky66.com” was re-registered privately through a Singaporean registrar.
On March 2nd, 2022, “luckyfootball1.com” was privately registered using the same registrar.
Attempting to reach either website domain now results in a DNS error of “ERR NAME NOT RESOLVED.”
Lucky Football was a Ponzi-style “click a button” program aimed at Nigerians.
Lucky Football invited investors to invest in Nigerian Naira (NGN) and tether, a cryptocurrency (USDT).
In the hope of advertising rewards, lucky Football affiliates invested in NGN or USDT.
Lucky Football has the greatest daily ROI of 4.01 percent that I observed.
Affiliates were also paid for individually recruiting new players:
Get 10,000 NGN if you recruit 5 affiliates in your downline.
35,000 NGN if you recruit a downline of 20 affiliates.
Recruit 50 affiliates and receive 200,000 NGN in your downline.
Recruit 100 affiliates and receive 400,000 NGN in your downline.
A “monthly pay” was also provided, which was linked to total downline recruitment:
Build a downline of 30 affiliates and receive 20,000 NGN per month; a downline of 60 affiliates and receive 40,000 NGN per month; a downline of 240 affiliates and receive 170,000 NGN per month; a downline of 500 affiliates and receive 400,000 NGN per month; a downline of 1000 affiliates and receive 1,200,000 NGN per month
The first six levels of a Lucky Football affiliate’s unilevel club were counted as downline affiliates for the monthly salary:
Referral commissions on invested monies were also paid using the aforementioned uni-level team structure, this time down six tiers of recruitment:
Lucky Football’s “click a button” Ponzi scheme was betting on football matches. Level 1 (personally recruited affiliates) – 10% level 2 – 6% level 3 – 4% level 4 – 3% level 5 – 2% level 6 – 1%
The only way to get a return was to make a fresh investment.
In or around April 2022, Lucky Football debuted. In May, new investment dried up, causing the Ponzi to collapse.
Tron.BI is one of a slew of “click a button” software Ponzi schemes that have popped up in recent months.
So far, BehindMLM has compiled the following information:
COTP – ostensibly produced trading activity by affiliates pressing a button – failed in May 2022.
EthTRX is a Ponzi based on an app, but without the daily task component.
Yu Klik – imitates trading activities by pretending to click a button. Indonesia
KKBT – purported to earn crypto mining money by hitting a button, targeting South Africa and India, and crashed in early June 2022.
EasyTask 888 – imitates social media manipulation (YouTube likes) by pretending to click a button. Colombia
PDF Finance – failed after claiming that clicking a button generated “buy data” that was sold to eCommerce companies. June 20, 2022
Shared989 – claimed that clicking a button was linked to social media manipulation (YouTube likes, for example), but it was shut off in June 2022.
86FB – claimed that pressing a button was linked to betting on the outcome of football matches, but it was shut down in April 2022.
0W886 – claimed that hitting a button was linked to betting on the outcome of football matches, but it was shut down in May 2022.
U91 – crashed in May 2022 after claiming that hitting a button was linked to betting on football match results.
365Ball — makes it appear as though pressing a button is linked to betting on the outcome of a football match (has collapsed multiple already)
LLC Football – claims that pressing a button is linked to betting on the outcome of a football match.
Parkour – assumes that pressing a button has something to do with social media manipulation (YouTube likes, etc.)
N9 Football – claimed affiliates hitting a button was related to wagering on football match outcomes, collapsed May 2022 OTCAI – pretended affiliates clicking a button created trading activity, collapsed May 2022 (collapsed May 2022)
Tron.BI – ostensibly links affiliates clicking a button to TRX cloud mining
Pretended associates of EFG Football The act of pressing a button was linked to betting on the outcome of a football match (collapsed May 2022)
Pretended associates of GP Football The act of pressing a button was linked to betting on the outcome of a football match (collapsed May 2022)
There are a lot more of these frauds out there that I haven’t yet discovered.
The fraudsters behind all of the recent app-based tasks Ponzis appear to be the same.
I believe the organization is based in China or Singapore, based on the usage of simplified Chinese.
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The Lucky Football Ponzi scam has been exposed as a fraud.
I’m aware of two domains used by Lucky Football: “lucky66.com” and “luckyfootball1.com.”
On May 6th, 2022, “lucky66.com” was re-registered privately through a Singaporean registrar.
On March 2nd, 2022, “luckyfootball1.com” was privately registered using the same registrar.
Attempting to reach either website domain now results in a DNS error of “ERR NAME NOT RESOLVED.”
Lucky Football was a Ponzi-style “click a button” program aimed at Nigerians.
Lucky Football invited investors to invest in Nigerian Naira (NGN) and tether, a cryptocurrency (USDT).
In the hope of advertising rewards, lucky Football affiliates invested in NGN or USDT.
Lucky Football has the greatest daily ROI of 4.01 percent that I observed.
Affiliates were also paid for individually recruiting new players:
Get 10,000 NGN if you recruit 5 affiliates in your downline.
35,000 NGN if you recruit a downline of 20 affiliates.
Recruit 50 affiliates and receive 200,000 NGN in your downline.
Recruit 100 affiliates and receive 400,000 NGN in your downline.
A “monthly pay” was also provided, which was linked to total downline recruitment:
Build a downline of 30 affiliates and receive 20,000 NGN per month; a downline of 60 affiliates and receive 40,000 NGN per month; a downline of 240 affiliates and receive 170,000 NGN per month; a downline of 500 affiliates and receive 400,000 NGN per month; a downline of 1000 affiliates and receive 1,200,000 NGN per month
The first six levels of a Lucky Football affiliate’s unilevel club were counted as downline affiliates for the monthly salary:
Referral commissions on invested monies were also paid using the aforementioned uni-level team structure, this time down six tiers of recruitment:
Lucky Football’s “click a button” Ponzi scheme was betting on football matches. Level 1 (personally recruited affiliates) – 10% level 2 – 6% level 3 – 4% level 4 – 3% level 5 – 2% level 6 – 1%
The only way to get a return was to make a fresh investment.
In or around April 2022, Lucky Football debuted. In May, new investment dried up, causing the Ponzi to collapse.
Tron.BI is one of a slew of “click a button” software Ponzi schemes that have popped up in recent months.
So far, BehindMLM has compiled the following information:
COTP – ostensibly produced trading activity by affiliates pressing a button – failed in May 2022.
EthTRX is a Ponzi based on an app, but without the daily task component.
Yu Klik – imitates trading activities by pretending to click a button. Indonesia
KKBT – purported to earn crypto mining money by hitting a button, targeting South Africa and India, and crashed in early June 2022.
EasyTask 888 – imitates social media manipulation (YouTube likes) by pretending to click a button. Colombia
PDF Finance – failed after claiming that clicking a button generated “buy data” that was sold to eCommerce companies. June 20, 2022
Shared989 – claimed that clicking a button was linked to social media manipulation (YouTube likes, for example), but it was shut off in June 2022.
86FB – claimed that pressing a button was linked to betting on the outcome of football matches, but it was shut down in April 2022.
0W886 – claimed that hitting a button was linked to betting on the outcome of football matches, but it was shut down in May 2022.
U91 – crashed in May 2022 after claiming that hitting a button was linked to betting on football match results.
365Ball — makes it appear as though pressing a button is linked to betting on the outcome of a football match (has collapsed multiple already)
LLC Football – claims that pressing a button is linked to betting on the outcome of a football match.
Parkour – assumes that pressing a button has something to do with social media manipulation (YouTube likes, etc.)
N9 Football – claimed affiliates hitting a button was related to wagering on football match outcomes, collapsed May 2022 OTCAI – pretended affiliates clicking a button created trading activity, collapsed May 2022 (collapsed May 2022)
Tron.BI – ostensibly links affiliates clicking a button to TRX cloud mining
Pretended associates of EFG Football The act of pressing a button was linked to betting on the outcome of a football match (collapsed May 2022)
Pretended associates of GP Football The act of pressing a button was linked to betting on the outcome of a football match (collapsed May 2022)
There are a lot more of these frauds out there that I haven’t yet discovered.
The fraudsters behind all of the recent app-based tasks Ponzis appear to be the same.
I believe the organization is based in China or Singapore, based on the usage of simplified Chinese.