Krzysztof Tymoteusz operates 3x2 Core, a bitcoin cash gifting scheme registered on November 8, 2016, which requires participants to funnel cryptocurrency to each other in a two-tier matrix structure. The domain 3x2core.com provided no information about its ownership for weeks, only revealing Tymoteusz's identity on November 27, 2016, following an investigation by Daily Exposed. Such anonymity often marks schemes lacking legitimate business operations.

3x2 Core offers no products or services. Its entire function depends on affiliates recruiting new members. The scheme operates through a 3x2 matrix, a common structure in gifting and pyramid models. A participant occupies the top position, with three direct recruits forming their first level. These three individuals then each recruit three more, creating a second level of nine positions directly below the first.

Entry into the scheme requires a weekly payment of 0.05 BTC. This "gift" is paid directly to the person who recruited the new member. Upon making this payment, the new member becomes eligible to receive 0.05 BTC from each of the three individuals they recruit into their first level. This mechanism creates the initial financial flow within the matrix.

Advancing to the second matrix level demands an additional weekly payment of 0.15 BTC. This sum also goes directly to an upline member. Once this payment is made, the participant can collect 0.15 BTC from each of the nine affiliates who join their second level. Full participation across both matrix levels thus costs a total of 0.2 BTC per week. All payments within the 3x2 Core system occur on a weekly cycle.

The 3x2 Core website openly states that "each member earns 100% commission paid directly from the member from members in their downline." This explicit description confirms the model as pure cash gifting. Money moves directly from new recruits to their upline, without any genuine product or service acting as an intermediary. The use of bitcoin does not alter the fundamental nature of the scheme. It merely facilitates the peer-to-peer transfers, providing a layer of digital currency instead of traditional fiat.

Cash gifting schemes, regardless of the currency used, are illegal in many jurisdictions because they are inherently unsustainable. They rely on an ever-expanding base of new recruits to pay off earlier participants. The constant need for new money means the scheme operates like a chain letter, where the supply of new members eventually runs out. When recruitment slows or stops, the weekly payments cease.

Participants at the bottom of the structure, unable to recruit enough new members, stop paying their weekly fees. This action starves the levels above them of funds. The collapse spreads upwards, affecting more and more participants who find their expected weekly payouts vanish. The system inevitably implodes, leaving the vast majority of participants with significant financial losses. This outcome is not a possibility but a mathematical certainty built into the design of such schemes.

The structure of 3x2 Core guarantees that only a small fraction of early entrants, particularly those at the very top, stand to profit. Everyone else contributes to their earnings. Victims often lose both their initial contributions and any subsequent weekly payments made in attempts to recoup their investments.

Krzysztof Tymoteusz's scheme exemplifies the dangers of anonymous online operations promising returns solely through recruitment. The lack of transparency combined with a direct gifting model places participants at extreme financial risk.