There is no information on the D’Rich Global website indicating who owns or runs the business.
The D’Rich Global website domain (“drichglobal.com”) was registered on the 2nd of January 2016, however the domain registration is set to private.
On the official D’Rich Global Facebook page, the admin running the page routinely responds to people complaining about not getting paid in Indonesian:
Indonesia is currently one of the largest traffic sources to the D’Rich Global website, coming in third at 13.6% after India (15.5%) and South Africa (14.6%)
This suggests the owner of D’Rich Global is Indonesian or at the very least speaks Indonesian. Whether or not the D’Rich Global admin is based out of Indonesia is unconfirmed but highly likely.
As always, if an MLM company is not openly upfront about who is running or owns it, think long and hard about joining and/or handing over any money.
The D’Rich Global Product Line
D’Rich Global has no retailable products or services, with affiliates only able to market D’Rich Global affiliate membership itself.
The D’Rich Global Compensation Plan
D’Rich Global affiliates invest funds via bitcoin on the promise of a 160% advertised ROI.
100% of the ROI paid out (funds initially invested by the affiliate)
must
be reinvested back into the company.
Investment amounts solicited by D’Rich Global are currently:
0.0789 BTC ($45.82 USD)
0.1789 BTC ($103.89 USD)
1.1789 BTC ($684.62 USD)
2.1789 BTC ($1265.35 USD)
5.1789 BTC ($3007.54 USD)
10.1789 BTC ($5911.19 USD)
20.1789 BTC ($11,718.49 USD)
Note that USD amounts are correct at the time of publication but are subject to change as per the current price of bitcoin.
A 15% referral commission is paid out on funds invested by personally recruited affiliates. It is also paid out on mandatory re-investment.
Joining D’Rich Global
Affiliate membership with D’Rich Global is tied to a minimum 0.0789 BTC investment.
Conclusion
Using the now cliched Ponzi tropes of “provide help” and “get help”, D’Rich Global operate a seven tier Ponzi scheme.
Affiliates invest a minimum of $45, on the promise of an advertised 160% ROI. Most of that ROI is trapped inside the company, funneling the majority of invested funds to the D’Rich Global admin and early investors.
There’s probably a bit of pay to play going on too, seeing those who invest more paid a larger share of newly invested funds.
Despite the obviously fraudulent nature of the scheme, D’Rich Global insist they aren’t using newly invested funds to pay off existing investors:
Contrary to a Pyramid system or Ponzi scheme,where existing members are paid by new members, and those who join first will always win and gain more results than those who join later. This does not occur on D’Rich system.
Remember that Facebook post from the D’Rich Global admin I published in the introduction of this review? Here’s the auto-translate of it:
Post negative comment here jg interchangeable slow GH all members for a new particip
🤖 Quick Answer
Who operates D'Rich Global and where is it based?The D'Rich Global website lacks ownership information, though the domain was registered in January 2016 with private details. Facebook administrators respond in Indonesian to complaints, and traffic analysis shows Indonesia ranks third (13.6%) among visitor sources, after India and South Africa, suggesting an Indonesian connection.
What red flags indicate D'Rich Global's legitimacy concerns?
The company maintains anonymous ownership, uses private domain registration, and operates as an MLM with reported non-payment issues. Administrative communications in Indonesian and geographic traffic patterns suggest undisclosed operational headquarters, typical of Ponzi scheme structures.
How is D'Rich Global's user base distributed geographically?
India represents the largest traffic source at 15.5%, followed by South Africa at 14.6% and Indonesia at 13.6%. This distribution pattern across developing nations aligns with common MLM recruitment
🔗 Related Articles
- Keep It 100’s Terrence Pounds indicted for C-19 loan fraud
- Lifestyle Marketing Group Review 2.0: Matrix points pyramid
- CVC Funding Review: Stolen FINRA broker name Ponzi
- Viral Compensation Review: Ten-tier 3×2 matrix Ponzi cycler
- OneCoin loses Santander account, now using Metro Bank
