A multi-level marketing scheme that has already collapsed twice is preparing for its third resurrection, this time under the name WeROn.

Power On Network launched in October 2016 as a straightforward Ponzi operation. Affiliates bought XeCoin points with the promise of flipping them later for profit. The company controlled the point values, making XeCoin worthless outside its own ecosystem. By December, the scheme cratered. Management relaunched it as Power on Xpress.

That version lasted six months. On May 28th, Power on Xpress sent affiliates marching orders: delete all content mentioning the company. Hours later, WeROn appeared.

The new iteration functions identically to the old ones. Affiliates now invest in Blocknotes points instead of XeCoins, betting they can sell them for returns. WeROn management sets the point values. Existing XeCoin holdings will convert to Blocknotes, though at dramatically reduced rates—a maneuver that wipes out prior earnings and eliminates the company's withdrawal obligations.

This reset pattern mirrors the strategy perfected by Crypto888 Club, the parent operation behind Power On. When too many affiliates try cashing out money that never existed, the points get reset to near-zero. Each relaunch shrinks the time before the next collapse because affiliates accumulate larger point balances with every cycle.

Crypto888 Club itself has rebooted three times. Its current version, Nano Club, has been plagued by payment problems for months.

WeROn added a brutal new requirement: affiliates must recruit two new investors or earn nothing. The renewable energy pitch got dropped for vague talk about "IPO companies." Management claims WeROn will own stakes in multiple IPOs and grant affiliates access to their products, generating "capital gain." No documentation connects any IPO to actual returns or explains how Blocknotes are valued.

Martin Bylsma runs the relaunch as CEO. Bylsma first surfaced in 2013 as CEO of Bitcoin Economy, another pyramid scheme. In 2015, he represented WellStar in communications that suggested involvement with additional questionable ventures.

The pattern is clear: collapse, rebrand, reset point values, repeat. Each time, the mechanics stay the same but the window before critical mass narrows. WeROn isn't a new opportunity. It's the same old scheme with a fresh coat of paint, run by people with a track record of operating them.


🤖 Quick Answer

What is WeROn and its connection to previous schemes?
WeROn is the third iteration of a multi-level marketing operation that previously operated as Power On Network and Power On Xpress. It emerged in May 2024 following the collapse of Power On Xpress, maintaining identical functionality where affiliates invest in digital points—now called Blocknotes—with promises of profitable resale.

How many times has this MLM scheme relaunched?
The scheme has relaunched three times since its initial launch in October 2016. It first operated as Power On Network, then rebranded as Power On Xpress after collapsing in December 2016, and finally emerged as WeROn following Power On Xpress's collapse in May 2024.

What operational model characterizes WeROn's investment system?
WeROn operates as a Ponzi scheme where affiliates purchase digital


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