OneCoin's Quarter-Million Euro Packages Mask a Deepening Scam
OneCoin just introduced a €225,500 investment package. That's a quarter million euros for what amounts to the same PDF files you get with their cheaper offerings.
The cryptocurrency scheme last week rolled out a €188,888 "Supreme Trader" package. Days later came the Super Combo at €225,500. Both packages contain identical educational materials to OneCoin's €5,500 Tycoon Trader option. The only difference is how many Ponzi points investors receive. OneCoin maintains these aren't sales of actual coins—just education—despite the astronomical price tags.
The con works because OneCoin claims its internal value sits around €6.8 per coin. But step outside their closed ecosystem and the price collapses.
A London restaurant called Spice Village advertises it accepts OneCoin as payment. When a community member contacted them to verify, the owner confirmed it. Then came the punchline: Spice Village values one OneCoin at £0.01. That's €0.011 per coin—roughly one-sixth of one percent of OneCoin's claimed internal value.
Do the math on a £13.99 buffet meal. A customer paying cash hands over a tenner and change. A OneCoin affiliate must transfer 1,399 coins worth €9,513 to eat the same meal. At real-world exchange rates, they're paying £8,572 for a curry.
Silo Sushi in Queensland and other merchants supposedly accepting OneCoin aren't actually doing so. The business owners are OneCoin affiliates. When an investor wants to "spend" their coins, they log into their OneCoin backoffice and transfer points directly to the restaurant owner's affiliate account. The restaurant owner then loses money on the transaction in real currency—either absorbing the loss or sometimes finding ways to convert their coins elsewhere.
OneCoin told an inquirer that merchants cannot accept OneCoin for payment. The currency remains private and unavailable to the public. The company promised to go live with 500,000 merchants by April 2016. That deadline passed years ago. They now claim a 2018 public launch, a timeline that has repeatedly slipped.
The gap between OneCoin's claimed value and its actual market price keeps widening. The packages creeping toward a quarter million euros signal desperation—the scheme needs fresh money from new recruits. Those recruits must believe their investment will eventually become valuable. Spice Village's exchange rate proves otherwise. No legitimate currency trades at one-sixth its stated value in the real world.
OneCoin isn't a cryptocurrency. It's a Ponzi scheme dressed in blockchain language, propped up by marketing posters in restaurant windows and increasingly expensive packages sold to people who can't cash out.
🤖 Quick Answer
What are OneCoin's recent high-value investment packages?OneCoin introduced investment packages valued at €188,888 and €225,500, marketed as "Supreme Trader" and "Super Combo" options. These packages contain identical educational materials to lower-priced offerings, with differences only in allocated Ponzi points. OneCoin maintains these represent educational products rather than cryptocurrency sales.
How does OneCoin's pricing mechanism function within its ecosystem?
OneCoin establishes an internal valuation of approximately €6.8 per coin within its closed system. However, this price lacks external market validation and significantly diminishes when attempting transactions outside OneCoin's proprietary platform, indicating the absence of genuine market-determined value.
What structural characteristics define OneCoin's business model?
OneCoin operates as a multi-level marketing scheme offering tiered investment packages with escalating price points. Investors receive
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