MX Revshare Review: Three-tier adcredit Ponzi scheme
A serial con artist is running yet another pyramid scheme, this time promising investors a 110% return on "ad pack" purchases that generate no actual advertising value.
James Lee Valentine founded MX Revshare and registered its domain on September 25, 2015. The website lists a Tortola address in the British Virgin Islands, but Valentine operates from the Philippines. He's done this before—twice.
In 2012, Valentine launched Supreme Wealth Alliance, a $55 chain-recruitment pyramid scheme that collapsed. A year later, he surfaced with MX Fast Money, which fed recruits into his primary MillionaireX Ponzi cycler. MX Revshare is his latest iteration.
The scheme has no actual products or services. Affiliates buy "Ad Packs" ranging from $5 to $50, supposedly bundled with advertising credits redeemable on the MX Revshare website. In reality, affiliates are just investing money with no legitimate product backing the transaction.
The pitch is simple: invest $5 and get $5.50 back (capped at $550 total). Invest $25 and receive $27.50 (capped at $13,750). Invest $50 and get $55. That's a flat 110% ROI, which affiliates are told they'll earn by clicking ten company-supplied ads daily.
The math doesn't work because there's no legitimate revenue source. MX Revshare pays returns by funneling newly invested money to earlier investors—the definition of a Ponzi scheme.
The recruitment layer makes it worse. Affiliates earn 10% commissions on level-one recruits' investments and 5% on levels two and three. Those percentages apply again to mandatory reinvestments. Affiliate membership itself is free, but you need to either recruit someone who invests or drop $5 yourself to qualify for commissions.
This three-tier structure combined with promised ROI payments creates a classic pyramid scheme dressed in MLM language.
When asked directly about the fraud allegations, Valentine's response was telling. "No, this is not an investment site nor is it illegal in any way, shape, or form. We sell ad services," he claimed.
But ad services don't generate 110% returns. Investments do. That's exactly the problem. By calling it an "ad service," Valentine attempts to hide what MX Revshare actually is: a financial investment vehicle with no underlying business generating the promised returns.
The advertising credits are window dressing. They exist solely to provide legal cover for what is fundamentally an investment contract. No legitimate advertising platform pays investors 110% returns based on displaying ads on a website no one visits.
This is Valentine's third known scheme in four years. The pattern is clear: launch a Ponzi cycler under a new name, recruit aggressively, pay early investors with new money until the pool dries up, then vanish and start again.
MX Revshare follows the playbook exactly. It will collapse when new investment slows. When it does, most affiliates will lose their money while Valentine moves on to scheme number four.
🤖 Quick Answer
What is MX Revshare and who operates it?MX Revshare is a pyramid scheme founded by James Lee Valentine, registered on September 25, 2015, with headquarters listed in Tortola, British Virgin Islands, though operated from the Philippines. It solicits investments through "Ad Pack" purchases promising 110% returns without generating legitimate advertising value.
What is James Lee Valentine's history with similar schemes?
Valentine previously operated Supreme Wealth Alliance, a $55 chain-recruitment pyramid scheme that collapsed in 2012, followed by MX Fast Money in 2013, which fed participants into MillionaireX Ponzi cycler. MX Revshare represents his third iteration of investment fraud schemes.
How does the MX Revshare scheme operate?
The scheme lacks legitimate products or services. Affiliates purchase "Ad Packs" at various price points
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