The same crooks who ran Mirollex are back. This time they're calling it BloxTec.

BloxTec's own Terms of Service document spells it out plainly. The company admits it is "legally affiliated with Mirollex," the cryptocurrency Ponzi scheme that collapsed in May after burning through investor money. The admission sits buried in their legal fine print, created on September 27th. The website domain was privately registered back in February 2021, suggesting the team was already preparing their next move while Mirollex was still operating.

Mirollex launched in late 2020 with a simple pitch: invest and earn 6.8% daily returns. For five months, money poured in. Then in early May 2021, the scheme's own CEO—a man named Boris—outed himself as an actor reading from a script. The con unraveled fast. By May 18th, Mirollex initiated its exit-scam. Five days later, on May 23rd, it was over. Investors lost everything. Law enforcement has traced the operation to eastern European scammers.

Now those same operators are running BloxTec. They're claiming to operate out of the UK through a shell company called BlockTech Limited. The UK choice is no accident. Companies House, which regulates UK corporations, lets anyone register a company for minimal cost with virtually no verification required.

The BloxTec pitch mirrors Mirollex's structure. Affiliates invest between $10 and $3,000 in bitcoin. BloxTec promises daily returns of up to 15%. The scheme throws in a referral carrot: a 5% single-level commission on any bitcoin that personally recruited affiliates bring in. It's a classic multi-level recruitment model designed to accelerate the money flow.

The math is simple and brutal. Ponzi schemes always collapse when affiliate withdrawals exceed incoming investment. There's no actual product, no real business generating those promised returns. The money simply gets shuffled from new recruits to earlier investors. Eventually—always—the money runs out. When it does, the majority of participants lose everything.

BloxTec's operators have already shown they understand this timeline. They structured their operation to move quickly. They kept their affiliation with Mirollex hidden from their website's public pages, only admitting it in legal documents most people never read.

On October 20th, 2021, BloxTec added another layer to the scam. The company started demanding withdrawal fees from affiliate investors before they could access their money. It's a classic advanced-fee scam tactic—squeeze the remaining cash out of victims right before the scheme collapses completely. Anyone still holding BloxTec investments at that point would have discovered their money locked behind another payment wall.

For anyone who lost money in Mirollex, the message is clear: the people responsible never stopped operating. They simply rebranded, reopened for business, and started recruiting the next wave of victims. BloxTec is Mirollex 2.0, run by the same crew, using the same playbook.


🤖 Quick Answer

What is the connection between Mirollex and BloxTec?
BloxTec is operated by the same individuals behind Mirollex, a collapsed cryptocurrency Ponzi scheme. BloxTec's Terms of Service explicitly states the company is "legally affiliated with Mirollex," which promised 6.8% daily returns before collapsing in May 2021 when its CEO revealed he was an actor following a script.

When was BloxTec's domain registered?
BloxTec's website domain was privately registered in February 2021, while Mirollex was still operating, suggesting the operators were preparing their subsequent venture during the original scheme's active period.

How did the original Mirollex scheme fail?
Mirollex launched in late 2020, attracting substantial investments through promised daily returns of 6.8%. In May 2021, the scheme collapsed after


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