Tom Taylor keeps launching pyramid schemes. And they keep dying.
The man behind Mega 2×7 registered the domain in July 2015 from a Cebu address in the Philippines. He's done this three times before in seven months, and each time the scheme collapsed under its own weight. This is his fourth attempt to cash in on the same tired model.
Taylor first caught BehindMLM's attention running UltimateAdClub in February. Affiliates paid $50 to buy into matrix positions and made money recruiting others to do the same. When nobody wanted in at that price, Taylor dropped it to $30. The scheme died anyway.
He pivoted to MegaCyclerClub in March. Same hustle: $50 matrix positions, promises of a $650 return. Traffic barely moved. Then came Residual Income Ads in June, a $10-a-month buy-in that asked affiliates to recruit more affiliates. That flopped too, according to Alexa traffic data. Now he's pushing Mega 2×7.
The scam is naked. Mega 2×7 has no actual products or services. There's nothing to sell except membership itself and access to advertising space on the company's own website—where, naturally, only other Mega 2×7 affiliates are looking at ads.
Here's how it works. New recruits buy $10 matrix positions in a structure that branches into two positions at each level, seven levels deep. In theory, that creates a pyramid with 256 slots at the bottom. Commissions depend on which level fills: level 1 pays $2 per spot, level 2 pays $1 per spot, levels 3 and 4 pay 50 cents each. The real money supposedly sits at the bottom—level 7 pays $3 per position, and there are 128 of them.
But there's a catch built into the math. Every affiliate must spend 20% of their commissions buying more matrix positions. Spend your way to success. That rule doesn't exist by accident.
The referral commission of $1 per recruit is the hook. It looks easy. Get people in, pocket a dollar, move on. But for anyone to actually make the promised returns from the matrix itself, the scheme needs constant recruitment. When recruitment slows, payouts stop. And they always slow.
Taylor proved this three times already. The money doesn't come from advertising credits or any real business activity. It comes exclusively from new recruits buying positions. That's the definition of a pyramid scheme.
Mega 2×7 has no public ownership information listed anywhere on its website. The domain owner is hidden. Taylor runs the show from the Philippines while affiliates in other countries handle the recruitment—the classic structure for schemes designed to stay one step ahead of regulators.
He'll launch a fifth scheme in a few months if history repeats. Same operator, same model, different name. The core truth never changes: when there's nothing to sell but recruitment, it's never about building a business. It's about moving money from new recruits to people who got in earlier. Until the music stops.
🤖 Quick Answer
What is Mega 2×7 and who operates it?Mega 2×7 is a matrix-based scheme registered in July 2015 from Cebu, Philippines. The operator, Tom Taylor, has launched multiple similar ventures including UltimateAdClub, MegaCyclerClub, and Residual Income Ads. Each previous scheme collapsed within months of launch, following identical recruitment-based business models requiring participant financial investment.
How does the Mega 2×7 compensation structure operate?
Mega 2×7 functions as a matrix scheme requiring participants to purchase positions for $10. Members generate income primarily through recruiting additional participants into the matrix structure rather than product sales or legitimate services, creating unsustainable growth requirements typical of pyramid scheme models.
What was the outcome of Tom Taylor's previous ventures?
Taylor's three prior schemes—UltimateAdCl
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