The website 6K Goal offers no ownership details, a common red flag in online financial operations. Its domain, 6kgoal.com, registered privately on May 8, 2015, hides registrant information. This anonymity immediately raised questions, especially given its striking resemblance to another recently reviewed program, Tripple Effect.

Browsing the 6K Goal site immediately triggered a sense of déjà vu. The entire design mirrors Tripple Effect almost exactly, a similarity impossible to miss for anyone familiar with the latter. Further investigation shows that large portions of 6K Goal's FAQ section were copied verbatim from Tripple Effect's site.

Both operations also display identical promotional banners for programs named ClubWealth and MegaCashTeam. More critically, both websites currently reside on the same server. This shared infrastructure suggests a strong connection, either through common administration or the use of the same web development team. The simultaneous launch of both sites within days of each other points toward shared ownership.

Such anonymity should prompt caution before anyone sends money. 6K Goal sells no retail products or services. Affiliates can only market membership to other affiliates. This internal recruitment structure defines its core activity.

The compensation plan is simple. Participants buy "matrix positions" for $150 each. These positions feed into a company-wide matrix. Each position requires four subsequent positions to fill before the original participant receives a $500 payout. This process constitutes the entire business model.

While affiliate membership is technically free, earnings depend entirely on purchasing at least one $150 matrix position. So the true entry cost is $150.

Both 6K Goal and Tripple Effect include nearly identical disclaimers. "BE ADVISED THAT THIS IS NOT INTENDED TO BE AN INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY IN ANY WAY. THE PROFITS WE SHARE IS JUST OUR WAY OF 'GIVING BACK' AND HELPING OTHERS." The FAQ further claims the return on investment is "ZERO" because payments are supposedly for advertising services and digital products, not an investment.

These frantic disclaimers do not change the underlying mechanics. 6K Goal operates by shuffling new participant money to pay earlier participants. Four affiliates invest $150 each, totaling $600. The administrator keeps $100, and one earlier investor receives $500. This structure precisely matches the definition of a Ponzi scheme.

The advertising credits and "digital products" serve as mere window dressing. They do not alter the financial equation or the flow of funds. Regulators, including the Federal Trade Commission, consistently identify such offerings as attempts to mask illegal pyramid or Ponzi schemes.

Like all Ponzi schemes, 6K Goal will collapse when the influx of new investment slows. Because it uses a matrix structure, this breakdown will manifest as positions taking progressively longer to "cycle," until the entire matrix freezes.

When the scheme collapses, most invested funds will sit in the administrator's accounts and in the pockets of early investors. The vast majority of later participants will lose their money.

Whoever launched these two operations likely tried to hedge their bets by running both simultaneously. The strategy would have been to focus resources on whichever scheme gained more traction. 6K Goal appears to have lost that race, lacking, for example, a visible Facebook group. Yet, the website itself remains live and continues to accept funds.

Expect both 6K Goal and Tripple Effect sites to vanish once Tripple Effect's operations implode. Any remaining funds will disappear with the anonymous individuals controlling these schemes. Federal agencies, including the FTC and FBI, regularly pursue restitution orders against perpetrators of similar online investment scams, though recovery for victims remains a significant challenge.