Paymara Collapses, Reboots NFT Ponzi as Paymara Meta

A Ponzi scheme that promised daily returns just pivoted to a new website and locked investor funds for another 180 days.

Paymara announced its "reboot" as Paymara Meta on Facebook earlier today, telling members their accounts and accumulated "profits" had been transferred to a new domain at paymarameta.com. Users can log in with their old credentials. No explanation for the switch was offered.

The move comes as the original scheme collapses. Rather than shut down, the operators are simply moving the scam sideways, now packaging it with NFT investments to squeeze more money from victims before the final exit.

Paymara Meta's new pitch centers on "fixed deposit" plans that lock investments for 180 days while promising daily profits. Investors who've already watched their money disappear into the original scheme face the same structure on the rebrand—money goes in, stays locked, and never comes back.

A week before launching Paymara Meta, Paymara announced an NFT venture. The timing suggests operators were preparing an exit strategy. Victims would be left holding worthless digital assets while the scammers disappeared with the cash.

There's also Paymara Coin, which the operators weren't advertising on their official channels. An ad for the coin appeared in a Nigerian newspaper, offering locals a "better deal" as the Ponzi wound down. This suggests the scammers were targeting different markets with different exit strategies.

The Paymara Meta domain registration occurred May 12th, just days ago. This timing aligns suspiciously with the crypto crash. The scammers likely abandoned their original NFT and coin exit plans after the market collapse made it harder to cash out. A new rebrand and another round of "fixed deposits" became the fallback.

Both Paymara and Paymara Meta claim to operate from Canada through a provided corporate address. That Canadian front is standard cover. Boris CEO Ponzi schemes—the structure used here—are typically run by Russian and Ukrainian scammers who operate these schemes in bulk, recycling the same playbook across multiple fake companies.

How it works: victims invest money, see fake "daily profits" accumulate in their accounts, and are pressured to recruit others. The new recruits' money pays the fake returns shown to early victims. When the scheme collapses or gets too hot, operators simply launch a rebranded version and move existing victims over, extracting another round of "investment" before vanishing.

The Paymara Meta website exists. The scammers are operating openly on Facebook. And they're waiting for the next batch of people desperate enough to believe a website promising daily returns is legitimate.


🤖 Quick Answer

What is Paymara Meta and how does it relate to the original Paymara scheme?
Paymara Meta is a rebranded continuation of the original Paymara Ponzi scheme. Following the collapse of the initial platform, operators transferred user accounts and claimed profits to a new domain, paymarameta.com, maintaining investor access with existing credentials while introducing NFT-based investment products.

What investment model does Paymara Meta employ?
Paymara Meta operates fixed deposit plans requiring 180-day fund lockups while promising daily returns. This structure mirrors traditional Ponzi mechanisms, generating returns for early investors through subsequent participant deposits rather than legitimate business operations or asset growth.

Why did Paymara transition to Paymara Meta?
The original Paymara platform experienced financial collapse. Rather than ceasing operations, administrators executed a lateral pivot, rebranding the scheme and


🔗 Related Articles

- Wiseling’s marketing videos shot in Russian rented office
- The Apex Power Review: Boris CEO crypto mining Ponzi
- Futurion Finance Review: NFT MLM crypto Ponzi scheme
- FVP Trade Review: Boris CEO FVP Holdings securities fraud
- Benjamin Reynolds served, CFTC to file for default