A shadowy operator is running OneDollarExplosion, a cash gifting scheme that promises payouts through matrix recruitment. The company's website reveals nothing about who's actually in charge.

The domain onedollarexplosion.com was registered on January 14th under the name "Keno," with a Kingston, Jamaica address listed as contact. That same email address registered two other domains: ten2millions.com and unlimited100.com. Ten2Millions operated as a matrix-based pyramid scheme where affiliates paid $15 to buy positions and earned by recruiting others into the same arrangement. Unlimited100, now defunct, appears to have followed the same playbook.

OneDollarExplosion has no actual products or services. Affiliates don't sell anything real. They only recruit new affiliates and collect money from them. That's the entire business model.

The compensation structure revolves around two matrix systems. The first is a 2×9 matrix where an affiliate sits at the top with two positions underneath. Those branch into four positions at level two, then eight at level three, and so on through nine levels total. Each level requires a qualification fee—$1 for level one, $2 for level two, climbing to $500 by level six. Payouts supposedly reach $8 at level two, $40 at level three, and jump to $32,000 at level six. But here's the catch: you only collect when your level is completely full. Levels seven through nine aren't even explained in their materials.

The second system uses 2×2 matrix cyclers arranged in three tiers. A first-tier position costs $20. When all six positions fill, the company pays $40 and moves the affiliate to a second-tier matrix worth $400 at completion. The third tier pays $900. Once completed, the affiliate cycles back into the same tier endlessly.

The math doesn't work. In any matrix scheme, it becomes mathematically impossible to fill positions as recruitment slows. Early joiners might see quick returns, but the structure guarantees most participants will lose money. The absence of real revenue from actual customers—no products sold, no services rendered—means payouts depend entirely on a constant stream of new recruits buying in.

OneDollarExplosion operates in the gray zone between cash gifting and pyramid scheme. Regulators across multiple states have targeted similar operations. The FTC has repeatedly warned that systems promising income primarily from recruitment rather than retail sales are illegal, regardless of the dollar amounts involved.

The connection between OneDollarExplosion and the operator's previous ventures signals a pattern. Running multiple recruitment schemes from the same email account suggests this isn't someone's first attempt at working this angle. It's a repeat performance with a new domain and new marketing angle.

For anyone considering joining, the reality is stark. The vast majority of participants in these schemes lose money. The winners are those at the very top who got in first. Everyone else feeds the system before it collapses, which it inevitably will.


🤖 Quick Answer

What is OneDollarExplosion and how does it operate?
OneDollarExplosion is a cash gifting scheme registered in January under the name "Keno" with a Kingston, Jamaica address. The operation promises payouts through matrix-based recruitment, requiring affiliates to recruit new members rather than selling legitimate products or services, following a pyramid scheme structure.

Who operates OneDollarExplosion?
The operator uses the pseudonym "Keno" and registered the domain onedollarexplosion.com with contact information listing a Kingston, Jamaica address. The same email address registered two previous schemes: Ten2Millions and Unlimited100, suggesting coordinated operations.

What is the business model of OneDollarExplosion?
OneDollarExplosion operates on a matrix recruitment model where affiliates generate revenue exclusively through recruiting new participants rather than selling tangible products or


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