The GP Football Ponzi scheme has collapsed.

GP Football operated from the website domain “gp686.com”.

GP686 was privately registered through a Chinese registrar on January 8th, 2022.

Attempts to access GP Football’s website return either access blocked or tunneling errors (i.e. the scammers behind it pulled the plug).

GP Football was a “click a button” app Ponzi targeted at Nigeria.

GP Football solicited investment in Nigerian Naira (NGN) and the cryptocurrency tether (USDT).

Minimum investment amounts appear to have been 3000 NGN or 100 USDT.

GP Football affiliates invested NGN or USDT on the promise of advertised returns.

The highest daily ROI I saw offered by GP Football was 8.84%.

The MLM side of GP Football paid on recruitment of affiliate investors:

level 1 (personally recruited affiliates) – 8%

level 2 – 5%

level 3 – 3%

GP Football’s “click a button” Ponzi ruse was betting on football matches.

Returns were in fact only tied to new investment.

GP Football launched in or around April 2022. New investment ran dry within a few weeks, prompting GP Football’s collapse.

GP Football is part of a group of “click a button” app Ponzis launched over the past few months.

Thus far BehindMLM has documented:

COTP
 – pretended affiliates clicking a button generated trading activity, 
collapsed
 May 2022

EthTRX
 is a similar app-based Ponzi, with the daily task component disabled

Yu Klik
 – pretends clicking a button generates trading activity, targeting Indonesia

KKBT
 – pretended clicking a button generates crypto mining revenue, targeted South Africa and India & collapsed early June 2022

EasyTask 888
 – pretends clicking a button was tied to social media manipulation (YouTube likes), targets Colombia

DF Finance
 – pretended clicking a button generated “purchase data” which was sold to ecommerce platforms, 
collapsed
 June 2022

Shared989
 – pretended clicking a button was tied to social media manipulation (YouTube likes etc.), collapsed June 2022

86FB
 – pretended clicking a button was tied to gambling on football match outcomes, collapsed April 2022

0W886
 – pretended clicking a button was tied to gambling on football match outcomes, collapsed May 2022

U91
 – pretended clicking a button was tied to gambling on football match outcomes, collapsed May 2022

365Ball
 – pretends clicking a button is tied to gambling on football match outcomes, (has collapsed multiple already)

YLCH Football
 – pretends clicking a button is tied to gambling on football match outcomes

Parkour
 – pretends clicking a button is tied to social media manipulation (YouTube likes etc.)

OTCAI
 – pretended affiliates clicking a button generated trading activity, collapsed May 2022

N9 Football
 – pretended affiliates clicking a button was tied to gambling on football match outcomes (collapsed May 2022)

Tron.BI
 – pretends affiliates clicking a button was tied to TRX cloud mining

EFG Football
– pretended affiliates clicking a button was tied to gambling on


🤖 Quick Answer

What was GP Football and how did it operate?
GP Football was a Ponzi scheme operating through gp686.com that targeted Nigerian investors. It solicited investments in Nigerian Naira and USDT cryptocurrency with promised daily returns up to 8.84%, combining a Ponzi structure with MLM recruitment incentives through multiple affiliate levels.

When was GP Football's domain registered and what happened to it?
The domain gp686.com was privately registered through a Chinese registrar on January 8th, 2022. The website subsequently became inaccessible, with attempts to access it returning access blocked or tunneling errors, indicating the operators had ceased operations.

What investment minimums did GP Football require?
GP Football established minimum investment amounts of 3,000 Nigerian Naira or 100 USDT. Affiliates invested these amounts expecting advertised returns, while the scheme generated additional revenue


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