Happy football seems a Click Button ponzi scheme and fraud

Unveiling the True Nature of Happy Football: A ‘Click a Button’ Ponzi Scheme

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Happy Football Review: Unmasking the Football Ponzi Scam

When we venture into the world of Happy Football, an unsettling silence shrouds its ownership and leadership.

A glaring absence of any traceable information on their website’s homepage leaves us with nothing more than an affiliate login form.

In the realm of MLM companies, transparency about the people at the helm is paramount.

If a company is reticent about revealing its executives or owners, it raises red flags that should give any prospective participant pause.

Happy Football’s Product Offering

Turning our attention to their product lineup, Happy Football presents a stark void when it comes to tangible goods or services that affiliates can market.

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It becomes apparent that their focus is singular – the promotion of Happy Football affiliate memberships themselves.

Happy football page

Delving into the Compensation Plan of happy football

Happy Football lures its affiliates into investing Pakistani rupees (PKR), alluring them with the promise of daily returns.

These daily returns, however, are far from consistent, often peaking at a meager 15%.

The compensation structure extends beyond the investments, with Happy Football also offering referral commissions on the recruitment of new members, organized in a three-level unilevel system:

– Level 1 (personally recruited affiliates) – 6%

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– Level 2 – 2%

– Level 3 – 1%

Getting on Board with Happy Football

At the surface, becoming an affiliate is seemingly cost-free.

However, meaningful participation in their income opportunity necessitates a minimum investment of 600 PKR.

It is noteworthy that this company actively solicits these investments through Pakistani payment processors like EasyPaisa.

Happy football mlm reviews

Happy Football’s True Colors

Unveiling the truth about Happy Football, it becomes evident that it’s another iteration of the “click a button” app Ponzi scheme.

The core premise of this scheme revolves around betting on football matches, seemingly as simple as clicking a button.

However, this oversimplified façade belies the reality.

They merely recycles the funds invested by participants to fulfill their promised returns.

It’s a financial game of smoke and mirrors, with no real substance.

Unmasking a Broader Trend

Happy Football isn’t alone in this dubious realm.

Numerous schemes with identical themes, such as CFG, BLQ Football, and UB Football, have already collapsed.

These “click a button” Ponzi schemes have proliferated since late 2021, often vanishing after a few weeks to a few months of operation.

 

The ominous shadow of Chinese scammers looms over these “click a button” app Ponzi schemes.

It is believed that the same group of individuals is orchestrating this plague, leaving a trail of financial ruin in their wake.

Inevitably, these “click a button” app Ponzi schemes meet their demise by abruptly disabling their websites and applications, vanishing without warning.

This abrupt exit strategy leaves the majority of investors grappling with substantial losses, illustrating the harsh realities of the inevitable mathematics behind Ponzi schemes.

In the world of these scammers, it’s clear that a perilous game is being played, one where the odds are heavily stacked against the unsuspecting participants.

Stay vigilant, for schemes like these often come with a high price tag of financial loss and disappointment.


Daniel Leinhardt

Daniel Leinhardt is a Professional Researcher and Artist. Presented the BBC big dollar GiveAway on the BBC World services and a contributor to several OneCoin Documentaries. Daniel Spends most of his time writing books, doing music and researching about Artificial intelligence and Exposing fraud.

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