A serial scammer is back with a fresh scheme. The same operator who ran two collapsed investment frauds in September is now pushing RevShareMatrix—the third incarnation of what appears to be a coordinated con.

The pattern is unmistakable. AdHitsMatrix launched September 10th, promising $20 positions and daily returns. It stopped paying affiliates twelve days later. CyclerAds followed on September 25th, offering nearly identical terms before collapsing just as quickly. Now RevShareMatrix is open for business, using the same playbook.

The domain revsharematrix.com was registered August 27th, 2014 under the name "Farrow Williams" with a Warrington, UK address. That's no accident. The same address is a virtual mailbox shared by multiple shell companies—a classic move for operators who want to hide their tracks. RevShareMatrix's website footer contains links directly to CyclerAds, the dead scheme, cementing the connection.

Here's how the con works: RevShareMatrix has no actual products. Affiliates buy their way in, purchasing $20 positions that theoretically generate "2% to 3% daily" returns over 70 days. That's 140% to 210% promised profit. On paper it looks like easy money. In reality, it's a revenue-sharing position in what functions as a pure Ponzi scheme.

The scammer piles on complexity with matrix cyclers—five of them, each costing $20 to enter. They're structured as 2×1, 2×2, 2×3, 2×4, 2×5, and 2×6 matrices. The math is simple enough to follow: each level branches into two positions, which branch again. But the purpose is clearer when you look at the previous schemes. These cyclers extract money from early investors and funnel it to those at the top. The company refuses to disclose how much of the promised returns get siphoned off to fund the cycler payouts.

When new money stops flowing in—and it always does—the whole thing collapses. People who bought positions lose everything. The operator disappears and reappears three weeks later with a fresh domain and fresh promises.

AdHitsMatrix victims lost their investments in mid-September. CyclerAds never paid out meaningful returns. Now the same person is running RevShareMatrix, banking on the fact that there's always another batch of people willing to gamble on impossible returns.

The telltale signs are everywhere. No legitimate business hides the identity of its operator. No legitimate investment offers 2% daily returns—that's 730% annually, a number no legal fund could sustain. No legitimate company bundles "advertising credits" with investment positions; that's just window dressing to make an illegal securities offering look like a product sale.

RevShareMatrix is operating right now. The domain is active. People are probably signing up today, purchasing positions, believing they've found an edge. They haven't. They've found the same con they're chasing a third time, just wearing a different name.


🤖 Quick Answer

Is RevShareMatrix linked to previous investment fraud schemes?
RevShareMatrix shares operational patterns with AdHitsMatrix and CyclerAds, two schemes launched by the same operator in September. All three platforms employed identical business models, promised daily returns, and experienced rapid collapse. The domain registration used a virtual mailbox address associated with multiple shell companies, indicating coordinated fraudulent activity.

What warning signs characterize RevShareMatrix's structure?
The scheme utilizes a registered domain traced to "Farrow Williams" at a Warrington UK virtual mailbox address. This address connects multiple shell entities, a common tactic for operators maintaining anonymity. The sequential launch pattern—three similar platforms within weeks—demonstrates deliberate infrastructure designed to evade regulatory detection and investor recourse mechanisms.

How did previous iterations of this fraud operate?
AdHitsMatrix launched September 10th offering $20 positions with daily returns before ceasing affiliate


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