RamTrex: The Same Scam, Rebranded and Relaunched
The owners of a collapsed cryptocurrency Ponzi scheme are back in business with a fresh name and the same broken promises.
Mass Cryp launched in late 2017 under three co-founders: CEO Pijush Sarkar, CFO Saurabh Singh, and COO Shashank Mishra. The operation was straightforward—give us $100, get $120 back. It was a classic Ponzi, and BehindMLM exposed it as such in December 2017.
Attached to Mass Cryp was its own altcoin called MASS. As predicted, the coin crashed shortly after launch. The scheme needed a reset.
In June, Mass Cryp announced a fork of MASS to create a new altcoin: ADMC. Desperate investors rushed to drain what little remained in Mass Cryp's ROI reserves. The house of cards didn't hold. The website posted a notice to users: the price crash had depleted funds needed to honor withdrawals at promised rates. Mass Cryp capped ADMC at an artificial $0.05 price per coin.
The math was simple. They launched a Ponzi attached to a worthless altcoin. That collapsed, so they launched another worthless altcoin. That collapsed because new money couldn't cover promised returns. So they capped the coin's value artificially.
Sometime after ADMC tanked, the same operators launched RamTrex.
RamTrex follows the playbook. Investors buy mining package plans for $100 or $200 and are promised daily returns of 3 to 4 percent. The catch comes at maturity. Investors must reinvest the full $100 or $200 again. Only what's left—$20 or $50—can be withdrawn. The cycle repeats.
Affiliates earn commissions by selling these packages to retail customers and recruiting new affiliates. The company dangles ten ranks: Star, Star Elite, Visionary, Visionary Elite, Premier, Premier Elite, Crypto Diamond, Crypto Legend, and two others. Each rank requires hitting sales targets and earning thresholds. A Visionary Elite must generate 1,000 downline package sales and earn $5,000. A Premier Elite must generate 4,000 downline sales and earn $20,000.
This is the same structure that failed at Mass Cryp. The same founders are running it. The same altcoin mechanics are in play, just with a different name.
RamTrex is not an evolution. It's a resurrection of a failed scheme under new branding. The operators banked on investors not connecting the dots between Mass Cryp's collapse and RamTrex's launch. They counted on the speed of crypto to bury the past.
For anyone recruited into RamTrex, the outcome is predictable. When the inflow of new money slows—and it always does—the promised daily returns will dry up. Withdrawal requests will pile up. The operators will announce technical difficulties, price crashes, or hard cap limits. Another altcoin fork may follow. Another artificial price cap. Another reset.
The cycle continues until the latest scheme, like the last one, collapses entirely.
🤖 Quick Answer
What was Mass Cryp and how did it operate?Mass Cryp was a cryptocurrency scheme launched in late 2017 by Pijush Sarkar, Saurabh Singh, and Shashank Mishra. It operated as a Ponzi scheme, promising investors a 20% return on $100 investments. The operation collapsed within months after its associated altcoin MASS crashed following launch.
What strategy did Mass Cryp employ to continue operations after collapse?
Following the scheme's failure, Mass Cryp announced a blockchain fork in June to create a new altcoin called ADMC. This rebranding attempt aimed to revive investor confidence and access remaining ROI reserves before the operation ultimately failed.
How did the cryptocurrency fork mechanism relate to the scheme's restart?
The blockchain fork allowed Mass Cryp operators to create a new token while
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