John Dierksmeier Quesada, listed with a Texas address, launched 2x2 Destiny in April 2016, offering a $99 matrix cycler. The scheme promises participants a $318 payout upon completion of a 2x2 matrix.
Dierksmeier Quesada has a history of launching similar online schemes. He previously introduced 2x2 Wealth, another matrix cycler. His record also includes Only7Bucks, Cafe Nopal, Eco Plus Network, and My Secret Fortune. My Secret Fortune, launched in November 2015, collapsed quickly. Its failure led directly to EZAdsNet in April 2016. EZAdsNet operated as a two-tier matrix Ponzi cycler and began failing itself last month, shortly before 2x2 Destiny appeared.
The 2x2 Destiny website provides no details about its ownership or operations. Affiliates pay $99 for a position in the system. The operation sells no retail products or services. Participants market only 2x2 Destiny affiliate memberships.
The compensation plan centers on a 2x2 matrix structure. A participant occupies the top position. Two positions sit below them on the first level. Each of those two positions then splits into two more, creating four positions on the second level. Six total positions must fill for the matrix to "cycle."
These six positions fill through the recruitment of new members, either directly by the participant or indirectly by those below them. Once filled, the participant receives $318 and gains an affiliate position within iTravelParty.
The math behind 2x2 Destiny reveals a Ponzi scheme. New participant funds pay out earlier participants. When six people pay $99, totaling $594, the original participant receives $318. The remaining $276 covers operating costs and administrator profit, alongside the new iTravelParty position.
This system also functions as a feeder for iTravelParty, which itself operates as a pyramid scheme. iTravelParty launched in mid-2015. It claims to offer legitimate travel services but primarily focuses on affiliate recruitment through an identical 2x2 matrix.
iTravelParty affiliates pay $299 for a matrix position and then $88 monthly to remain active. When six new people buy $299 matrix positions, a participant receives $400 and a new matrix position. A non-MLM commission of 40% is available for selling a $199 annual travel discount membership to retail customers, but this is not the core emphasis.
Alexa traffic data indicates iTravelParty is experiencing a significant decline. Its matrices have largely collapsed. 2x2 Destiny appears to be an attempt to inject new participants into iTravelParty's failing structure.
Recruitment-driven matrices demand an exponentially increasing number of new entrants to sustain payouts. This model is inherently unsustainable. Even if a participant cycles out of a 2x2 Destiny matrix and collects $318, they are immediately placed into a recruitment scheme that is already in serious decline.
The odds of cycling out of iTravelParty are near zero without personally recruiting six new 2x2 Destiny affiliates. Dierksmeier Quesada's documented history of launching and abandoning similar schemes suggests the entire setup is engineered for collapse.