Quick Cycler: Another $5.75 Ponzi from a Serial Scammer
A mysterious operator calling himself John Williams runs Quick Cycler, and he's done this before. Multiple times.
The quickcycler.com domain went live on March 20, 2016, but the registration stays hidden behind privacy protection. The person behind it goes by "omclub" on social media and claims to be the admin. Williams appears to be based in Malaysia, according to records from his earlier e-commerce ventures, though independent confirmation is impossible.
This is his fourth known scheme in four years.
Williams launched Our Matrix Club in 2012, promising participants $680 returns on $5 investments. It collapsed in 2014. Next came Super 2×7, a matrix cycler that launched in mid-2014 and imploded by November 2015. Williams posted a brief statement at the time: "It is with regret that 2 x 7 Matrix has been forced to closed due to lack of funds and lack of support from the members."
Earlier this year, he tried M2M Funds, a cash gifting scheme dressed up as crowdfunding. It died quickly. Now Quick Cycler.
The operation is bare-bones. Quick Cycler sells nothing to real customers—no products, no services. Affiliates only recruit other affiliates and buy $5.75 "Ad Packs." Each pack comes bundled with advertising credits to display ads on the Quick Cycler website. The credits are window dressing.
The money machine works like this: affiliates buy $5.75 matrix positions expecting a $10 payout. The matrix is 2×1, meaning two subsequent $5.75 investments must flow in before anyone gets paid. Referral commissions trickle down three levels: 40 cents on level one, 20 cents on level two, 15 cents on level three.
Join for free, but you must spend $5.75 minimum to make money.
Here's what matters: Quick Cycler generates no outside revenue. No customers buy these ad credits. No business model exists beyond recruitment. Every dollar paid out to participants comes from new participants buying in. That's the definition of a Ponzi scheme. The ad credits don't change that reality—they're just cover, and weak cover at that.
Williams has proven he'll run a scheme until it collapses, then rebrand and launch another. Quick Cycler follows the same playbook his previous operations did. The only variable is the name on the website.
🤖 Quick Answer
Who is the operator behind Quick Cycler?John Williams, a serial scammer based in Malaysia, operates Quick Cycler under the alias "omclub" on social media. He registered the quickcycler.com domain on March 20, 2016, using privacy protection to conceal ownership details. Williams has operated multiple fraudulent schemes since 2012.
What is Quick Cycler's structure?
Quick Cycler is a $5.75 matrix cycler scheme promising returns to participants through a hierarchical structure. The platform operates similarly to previous Ponzi schemes, generating income for upper-level members through recruitment rather than legitimate business activities or product sales.
What previous schemes did Williams operate?
Williams launched Our Matrix Club in 2012, collapsed by 2014. He then created Super 2×7, another matrix cycler starting mid-2014, which imploded by November 2
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