Royalty Crowdfunding Review: Seven tier cash gifting scheme

A mysterious operator with a track record of failed pyramid schemes is running another one. This time, it's called Royalty Crowdfunding.

The website royaltycrowdfunding.org lists no owner or operator. But domain records tell a different story. The site registered on June 15, 2016 under the name of Edwin Ramos, a Manila-based fraudster with a documented history of running collapsing schemes.

Ramos first surfaced in 2014 as the owner of Blessing4All, a matrix cycler pyramid scheme that cratered shortly after launch. Since then, he's marketed the Ponzi schemes iGems2Gold and Global InterGold (formerly EmGoldex). Now he's back with Royalty Crowdfunding.

On June 28, Ramos posted a marketing pitch on Facebook under the affiliate code "royaltyadmin." The pitch uses familiar language: gift money to others, receive money in return, unlimited income potential.

What Royalty Crowdfunding actually offers is nothing. There are no products to sell, no services to market. Affiliates can only recruit other affiliates and push the scheme itself.

The compensation plan operates through a 3×7 matrix. Affiliates pay $25 to "gift" into the system. Each affiliate starts at the top with three positions directly below them. Those three positions split into nine, then 27, then 81, all the way down seven levels. A complete matrix holds 3,279 positions.

Money moves like this: Of every $25 entry fee, Royalty Crowdfunding takes $5. The recruiting affiliate pockets $10. The affiliate who recruited the upline gets another $10.

As affiliates advance through the seven levels, the costs escalate. Level one costs $25. Level two costs $30. Level three jumps to $60. Level four hits $120. By level five, affiliates pay $240. Level six requires $480. The payments keep doubling.

Each level promises returns from the positions below. An affiliate at level five receives $240 payments from 243 positions in their matrix. But here's the problem: those 243 positions must be filled with real money from real people. The math doesn't work unless recruitment never stops and always accelerates.

It does stop. It always does.

Pyramid schemes and matrix gifting operations like this one collapse when recruitment dries up. The people at the bottom—the majority—lose everything. The people at the top, who got in early or recruited aggressively, pull out with profits built on the losses of thousands below them.

Ramos knows this. He's seen it happen before. Blessing4All proved it. iGems2Gold proved it. Global InterGold proved it.

Yet Royalty Crowdfunding launched anyway. The site gives no contact information beyond a Manila address. There's no company registration, no legitimate business structure. Just the familiar script of easy money and unlimited returns.

Regulators in multiple countries have cracked down on matrix gifting schemes. They're illegal in most jurisdictions. That hasn't stopped operators like Ramos from running them.

Royalty Crowdfunding is a cash gifting scheme dressed up as crowdfunding. It's a pyramid by another name. And based on Ramos's history, it will fail like all the others.


🤖 Quick Answer

What is Royalty Crowdfunding and who operates it?
Royalty Crowdfunding is a seven-tier cash gifting scheme operating through royaltycrowdfunding.org. Domain registration records reveal the site was registered on June 15, 2016 by Edwin Ramos, a Manila-based operator with documented involvement in multiple failed pyramid schemes including Blessing4All, iGems2Gold, and Global InterGold.

Who is Edwin Ramos and what is his history?
Edwin Ramos is a Manila-based fraudster who first emerged in 2014 as the operator of Blessing4All, a matrix cycler pyramid scheme that collapsed shortly after launch. He subsequently marketed additional Ponzi schemes including iGems2Gold and Global InterGold before launching Royalty Crowdfunding in 2016.

**What warning signs indicate Royalty Crowdfunding


🔗 Related Articles

- AM Redbull F1 accepts FutureNet Ponzi sponsorship, ignores concerns
- Philip Han under criminal investigation, condo raided in Brazil
- Fourth BitConnect class-action lawsuit filed in Minnesota
- Appi Travels Review 3.0: Three tiers of recruitment Ponzi fraud
- Axiome Review: AXM token Dubai Ponzi scheme