A cryptocurrency investment scheme that imploded in July has returned under a new name, using the same playbook to target victims a second time.
Majesty Hash went dark on July 25th after collecting bitcoin from thousands of investors. The company's explanation to affiliates was blunt: the system stopped working. Within days, the operators blamed a partner who had allegedly stolen all the bitcoin from their wallet. By August 2nd, they were already running a recovery scam, promising to return lost funds if victims sent more money.
Less than a month after the collapse, Majesty Hash Pro launched. Same scheme. Different URL.
The new operation tells investors they can earn a 3.97% daily return on bitcoin deposits. Participants invest between $30 and $100,000 and receive payouts for 60 to 90 days depending on how much they put in. The real money, however, flows from recruitment. Affiliates earn 6% commissions on people they directly recruit, 3% on second-level recruits, and 1% on the third level down.
None of this is new. Majesty Hash used the identical structure.
Majesty Hash Pro claims its returns come from bitcoin mining operations. There is no evidence any mining takes place. The first company's collapse proved what was actually happening: money from new investors paid earlier investors until the scheme ran out of fresh recruits.
The operators are making no effort to hide their identity. Majesty Hash Pro's website lists several executives, but the names are fake and the photos are stock images. The domain was registered privately on August 25th, 2021. Running a cryptocurrency investment operation while refusing to disclose who actually runs it is a standard move in fraud schemes.
Majesty Hash's victims were concentrated in India and Pakistan, according to traffic data from the defunct site. Those same markets are likely targets for Majesty Hash Pro.
The timeline reveals the cynicism at work. The first scheme collapsed. Operators strung victims along with excuses for weeks. Then they pivoted to a new domain and relaunched the same fraud with minor cosmetic changes. They're betting people will either forget or believe the new promises.
This is how modern Ponzi schemes operate. They don't go away—they rebrand. The scammers who made money from Majesty Hash are now making money from Majesty Hash Pro. When this collapses, they'll likely start again under another name.
For anyone considering joining: there is no bitcoin mining operation. There is no external revenue. There are no legitimate daily returns. The only money in the system comes from new recruits, which means the scheme has an expiration date. When it stops growing, it collapses. Everyone who joined after the peak loses their investment.
That's not speculation. It's what happened to Majesty Hash. It's what will happen to Majesty Hash Pro.
🤖 Quick Answer
What is Majesty Hash Pro?Majesty Hash Pro is a cryptocurrency investment scheme that emerged in August as a rebranded version of the collapsed Majesty Hash platform. It promises investors daily returns of 3.97% on bitcoin deposits, with investment ranges between $30 and $100,000 and payout periods lasting 60 to 90 days.
Why did the original Majesty Hash collapse?
Majesty Hash ceased operations on July 25th after collecting bitcoin from thousands of investors. Company operators initially claimed the system malfunctioned, later alleging that a partner had stolen all bitcoin from their wallet, before launching a recovery scam.
How does Majesty Hash Pro operate as a recovery scam?
Following the July collapse, operators launched recovery fraud schemes promising to return lost funds to victims if they deposited additional money. Majesty Hash Pro subsequently replicated the original investment
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