SuperDeal fails to provide ownership and executive information on its website.
In fact as I write this, Super Deal’s website is nothing more than an affiliate login form:
Ironically, despite the complete lack of transparency, SuperDeal’s website meta description is;
Super Deal’s experienced investment team aims to provide transparent, honest investing to everyone.
SuperDeal’s website domain (“superdeal.pro”), was privately registered on October 6th, 2022.
As always, if an MLM company is not openly upfront about who is running or owns it, think long and hard about joining and/or handing over any money.
SuperDeal’s Products
SuperDeal has no retailable products or services.
Affiliates are only able to market SuperDeal affiliate membership itself.
SuperDeal’s Compensation Plan
SuperDeal affiliates invest 5000 or more Ugandan shillings (denoted as UGX).
This is done on the promise of a 30% daily ROI.
SuperDeal pays referral commissions on invested funds down three levels of recruitment (unilevel):
level 1 (personally recruited affiliates) – 8%
level 2 – 2%
level 3 – 1%
Joining SuperDeal
SuperDeal affiliate membership is free.
SuperDeal Conclusion
SuperDeal is a low-effort Ponzi scheme targeting Uganda.
Investment is processed through BPAL Technologies LTD, a locally registered shell company.
Some effort has gone into BPAL Technologies LTD. An accompanying website describes the company as
An Inteligent [sic] Electronic Platform for making collections and payments.
Beyond laundering Ponzi money out of Uganda, BPAL Technologies doesn’t appear to have any business operations.
If the scammers behind SuperDeal were able to legitimately generate 30% a day on a consistent basis, they wouldn’t be giving you access for free.
In fact at 30% a day I can guarantee you they’d keep the golden goose to themselves.
All SuperDeal are doing is recycling invested funds to pay withdrawals, which will collapse when recruitment slows down.
At 30% a day, in addition to being low-effort, SuperDeal is probably well on the way to collapse.
SuperDeal’s early October launch coincides with the
collapse of BLQ Football
, a “click a button” Ponzi that caused widespread losses in Uganda.
Convince enough people who lost money in BLQ Football to invest in SuperDeal, collapse the Ponzi and double-scam them.
As Ugandans saw with BLQ Football, the math behind MLM Ponzi schemes guarantees the majority of participants lose money.
🤖 Quick Answer
What is SuperDeal and its primary business model?SuperDeal is an investment scheme operating under the domain superdeal.pro, offering purported daily returns of 30%. The company operates as a multi-level marketing structure where affiliates primarily market membership itself rather than tangible products or services, characteristic of Ponzi scheme operations.
Why is SuperDeal's lack of transparency concerning?
SuperDeal's website contains no ownership or executive information despite claiming to provide "transparent, honest investing." The domain was privately registered in October 2022, and the site functions primarily as an affiliate login portal, raising significant red flags about legitimacy and regulatory compliance.
What are the red flags in SuperDeal's compensation structure?
SuperDeal lacks retailable products or services, meaning affiliates earn exclusively through recruiting other members rather than selling legitimate goods. This recruitment-based compensation model is a defining characteristic of unsustainable pyramid
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