A woman named An Fuller has quietly launched Rush2Residual, a new matrix scheme that bears the fingerprints of her previous failed ventures in the MLM world.

Fuller registered the Rush2Residual domain on June 11, 2015. Before that, she was signing off support emails for Global Wealth Exchange Team, a two-tier matrix operation that promised $588 returns on $25 investments. The scheme collapsed within months of its September launch. Around the same time last year, Fuller's email also surfaced on Real Deal Donation eBooks, another buy-in scheme where affiliates paid $33 or $139 for access to an eBook library and recruitment commissions. That listing has since been scrubbed.

Rush2Residual itself has no actual products. Affiliates simply recruit other affiliates into the scheme. Membership is free, but participation requires buying into one of two matrix cyclers: either $22 positions (sold in pairs) or $100 positions.

The $22 cycler works like this: affiliates buy $11 positions in pairs. These positions cycle through three matrices. The first matrix pays nothing and shuffles participants forward. The second pays $4. The third pays $285 before the cycle resets.

The $100 cycler operates similarly but with higher payouts. The first matrix pays $10. The second pays $19. The third pays $500 and generates two new $100 positions in the first matrix, creating the illusion of unlimited earnings potential.

Both cyclers operate on a 2×1 matrix structure, meaning two new recruits must be brought in before commissions are paid. This requirement makes the math impossible at scale. When recruitment slows—and it always does—the bottom tier collapses while those at the top pocket money from new entrants.

Rush2Residual describes itself as a "cash & feeder concept" designed to funnel members into multiple programs simultaneously. Fuller advertises at least one affiliated opportunity costing $235, supposedly paying "up for 6 months."

This is a Ponzi scheme dressed in MLM language. It generates no revenue from any legitimate business activity. Every dollar paid out comes directly from money new recruits feed in. Fuller has essentially recycled the same playbook from Global Wealth Exchange Team—a scheme that already failed. The only difference is the name and the dollar amounts.

For people considering joining, the outcome is statistically certain: most will lose their investment, and only those at the very top stand any chance of profiting. Fuller is betting that enough people won't recognize the pattern before her latest venture collapses like the last one.


🤖 Quick Answer

Who is An Fuller and what is Rush2Residual?
An Fuller is an entrepreneur associated with multiple multi-level marketing ventures. Rush2Residual, launched in 2015, is a matrix scheme lacking legitimate products where participants primarily earn through recruiting other affiliates rather than selling tangible goods or services.

What were Fuller's previous business ventures?
Fuller previously operated Global Wealth Exchange Team, a two-tier matrix operation promising $588 returns on $25 investments that collapsed shortly after its September launch, and Real Deal Donation eBooks, a recruitment-based scheme charging $33-$139 for eBook access.

How does Rush2Residual operate?
Rush2Residual functions as a matrix scheme where affiliates generate income exclusively through recruiting other participants into the structure. The operation contains no actual products or services, relying entirely on recruitment commissions for revenue generation.

**What regulatory concerns sur


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