A two-tier pyramid scheme is recruiting members with promises of passive income while funneling money through $50 "matrix cycler" positions that collapse under their own weight.

Passive Wealth Booster, launched in May 2015, sits at the center of a web of failed Ponzi schemes. The operation is run by Alex Robinson, Daniel Edwin, and Bridget Fabian, with the latter two based in the UK and US respectively. The site itself hides behind private domain registration, but their FAQ openly names the three operators.

The red flags start piling up immediately. Robinson has promoted Traffic Monsoon, a HYIP Ponzi scheme that imploded months earlier. Investors in Traffic Monsoon still wait for frozen funds that will never materialize. Fabian spent 2015 and early 2016 pushing both Traffic Monsoon and Empower Network on her Facebook page. She's also publicly celebrated plans to flood revshare websites with mass recruitment campaigns, explicitly naming X100K—a matrix pyramid launched in 2015 that's already showing signs of collapse.

Here's how the scheme actually works: There's no product. No service. Passive Wealth Booster sells only membership itself, disguised as an "affiliate opportunity." New recruits buy $50 positions in what's called a two-tier matrix cycler. Once they buy in, they purchase "advertising credits"—essentially buying their place in the pyramid.

The math is brutal. Affiliates need to fill five positions in a 5×1 matrix before they see a commission. When that happens, they get $50 back and re-enter a new matrix. Their original position cycles into what they call Cycler 2, which pays out $250—but only after generating four new $50 positions below you.

Then comes the matching bonus: $25 for every Cycler 2 cycle from people you directly recruited, $15 from your second level. The structure demands constant recruitment. Once the recruitment stops—and it always does—the entire mechanism grinds to a halt.

The operators know exactly what they're doing. Fabian's recent post bragging about "mass promotion campaigns" isn't accident. It's admission. They're copying the playbook from X100K and other collapsed schemes, cranking the volume to maximum before the inevitable collapse.

Passive Wealth Booster is mathematically unsustainable. It requires exponential growth that no market can support. The commission structure guarantees that late joiners lose money to early ones. The three operators control the website, set the rules, and pocket fees from every purchase.

The scheme's survival depends entirely on recruitment velocity. Once that slows—and it will—members will discover their $50 positions are worthless. The operators will disappear, the private domain registration will become useful cover, and Passive Wealth Booster will join Traffic Monsoon and X100K in the graveyard of failed Ponzi schemes.

Anyone considering joining should ask themselves one question: If the scheme actually generated passive income, why would the operators need to constantly recruit new members?


🤖 Quick Answer

What is Passive Wealth Booster and how does its structure operate?
Passive Wealth Booster is a two-tier pyramid scheme launched in May 2015, operating a $50 "matrix cycler" system designed to generate passive income claims. The scheme recruits members through promises of returns while cycling money through unsustainable position structures that inevitably collapse under financial pressure.

Who are the operators behind Passive Wealth Booster?
The scheme is operated by Alex Robinson, Daniel Edwin, and Bridget Fabian. Edwin and Fabian are based in the United Kingdom and United States respectively. Despite using private domain registration to obscure ownership, the operators are openly identified in the platform's FAQ section.

What prior fraudulent schemes are connected to Passive Wealth Booster's operators?
Alex Robinson previously promoted Traffic Monsoon, a High-Yield Investment Program Ponzi


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