OneCoin's latest tablet deal exposes the real value of its worthless cryptocurrency.

OneCoin tells its affiliates one coin is worth €6.23. So when the company unveiled a tablet at its London CoinRush event this summer, you'd think the math would be straightforward. It wasn't.

The tablet appeared on OneLife's website as a sleek "Premium Line product" equipped with Android software, a quad-core processor, 1GB RAM, and 16GB storage. The specs resembled budget Chinese tablets flooding the market. Maixin Group, a Chinese retailer, sells what looks like nearly identical hardware for $55 to $60. OneCoin's version costs €550—a 1,033% markup from the wholesale price.

But the real scam emerges when OneCoin affiliates actually try to buy the tablet using their accumulated OneCoins.

The checkout screen demands 1,160 OneCoins. At the official rate of €6.23 per coin, that totals €7,226.80—roughly $8,148. For a $50 tablet. That's a 13,580% markup.

Even if you account for the tablet's slightly larger battery capacity compared to the Chinese version, the numbers make no sense. An affiliate storing value in OneCoins has just watched their holdings evaporate in a single transaction.

This is how pyramid schemes actually work. OneCoin controls every variable. It sets the coin's "official" value in its own system while simultaneously devaluing it through predatory product pricing. Affiliates who believed their OneCoins had real worth discover too late that inside the OneCoin ecosystem, the currency is whatever the company decides it is that day.

The company has floated the fantasy that OneCoin would eventually trade on public exchanges at the stated €6.23 rate. This tablet pricing proves that was never the intention. If OneCoin believed in its own valuation, affiliates could buy a $50 tablet for about €300 in coins. Instead, they're paying nearly $8,000.

The gap between the official price and the actual cost reveals OneCoin's game: accumulate coins, pay unrealistic markups on goods, watch your wealth disappear into company coffers.

OneCoin has already faced serious legal trouble. Bulgaria's financial regulator shut down the scheme in 2014. The U.S. Department of Justice charged founder Ruja Ignatova with wire fraud. Yet OneCoin continues operating, rebranding itself, and extracting money from new recruits.

The tablet is just the apparatus they're using to drain value from the system in plain sight. Every overpriced product is a hidden transaction moving affiliate wealth into company accounts. OneCoin isn't building a currency or a future. It's running a machine that converts hope into cash, one inflated tablet price at a time.


🤖 Quick Answer

What is the OneCoin tablet pricing controversy?
OneCoin marketed a tablet with budget specifications (quad-core processor, 1GB RAM, 16GB storage) at €550, despite identical Chinese models selling for $55-60. This represents a 1,033% markup. When affiliates attempted purchasing with OneCoin cryptocurrency valued at €6.23 per coin, the actual conversion rate revealed significantly inflated pricing compared to market value.

How does OneCoin's tablet deal expose cryptocurrency valuation issues?
The tablet transaction demonstrates the disconnect between OneCoin's stated coin value (€6.23) and its actual purchasing power. Affiliates discovered the cryptocurrency's real market worth substantially differed from official valuations, exposing the token's lack of genuine economic backing and legitimate exchange mechanisms.

What hardware specifications does the OneCoin tablet contain?
The tablet features Android software, a quad-core processor


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