A Queensland chef with a history in Ponzi schemes is now running the show at One Time Infinity, a matrix cycler that pays recruits to recruit rather than sell anything real.

Robert McAtamney, who's been cooking professionally since 1979, owns the operation. He made that clear on Facebook on August 18th when he advertised the site using an admin referral link, posting about a "new site Pre Launch Coming." That prelaunch was One Time Infinity. The domain onetimeinfinity.com registered on August 16th, 2015, lists private registration details—but McAtamney's control of the admin account makes his ownership obvious.

According to his LinkedIn profile, McAtamney lives in Queensland and worked as a head chef at various clubs and pubs, feeding athletes during the 2000 Olympics. His professional history tells a different story now. His profile also pitches Cash Money Bucket, another three-tier matrix Ponzi cycler. He's previously been an affiliate of Residual Income In a Box (cash gifting), EzWealthBuilder (matrix recruitment), and Cash Bot Club (a straight-line Ponzi scheme). With One Time Infinity, McAtamney has moved from the affiliate ranks into actually running one of these operations.

The One Time Infinity website tells you almost nothing. The "about us" page returns a 404 error. There's no information about who owns the company or how it works—visitors have to dig through the compensation plan to understand they're buying positions, not products.

One Time Infinity has zero retailable products or services. Affiliates can only market membership itself. Once signed up, they buy $10 or $30 matrix positions to participate in the income scheme. Bundled with these positions are advertising credits that can display ads on the One Time Infinity website—a thin veneer of legitimacy that changes nothing about the structure.

The $10 positions run through a 3×1 matrix. An affiliate needs three additional positions purchased before their position cycles out into a new $30 matrix. No commission gets paid during this cycle.

The $30 positions work differently. They start in a 3×2 matrix. One affiliate sits at the top with three positions directly beneath them at level one. The second level splits those three positions into three each, totaling twelve positions. Once all twelve fill, the affiliate gets $365 and entry into two new $30 matrix positions plus one entry into a $30 phase 2 matrix.

This is how modern Ponzi schemes operate. Money moves upward when people at the bottom buy in. When recruitment slows—and it always does—the whole thing collapses. New members pay old members. No one actually buys anything of value. The advertising credits are window dressing. McAtamney knows this pattern. He's been promoting these schemes for years. Now he's running one.


🤖 Quick Answer

What is One Time Infinity?
One Time Infinity is a matrix cycler scheme operating on a three-tier system with entry costs between $10-$30. Rather than promoting legitimate products or services, the operation generates revenue by recruiting new participants who pay to join, characterizing it as a Ponzi-style scheme where income derives primarily from recruitment activities rather than product sales.

Who operates One Time Infinity?
Robert McAtamney, a Queensland-based chef with professional cooking experience since 1979, owns and operates One Time Infinity. McAtamney previously worked as a head chef at various clubs and pubs and has a documented history involving Ponzi schemes. He controls the administrative account and announced the platform's prelaunch via Facebook using an admin referral link.

How was One Time Infinity registered?
The domain onetimeinfinity.com was registered on August 16th, 2


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