SuperOne launched in 2018 as a simple
smart-contract Ponzi scheme
.

Said Ponzi scheme was run through SuperOne tokens (SRX), of which 2 billion were created out of thin air.

SuperOne owner Andreas Christensen owns half of the two billion SuperOne tokens created. Needless to say he has a vested financial interest in getting the tokens to pump so he can cash out.

SuperOne’s original iteration collapsed shortly after launch. In 2020 the Ponzi scheme was
rebooted with a mobile trivia app
.

This was essentially an integration of Mowjow, a failed quiz app development company Christensen launched in 2013.

To summarize, the idea was that new trivia app users would eventually spend money, allowing Christensen and the original SuperOne token bagholders to cash out.

That didn’t happen. SuperOne’s reboot was as much a failure as the original smart-contract Ponzi.

Since 2020, SuperOne rode the NFT and metaverse grift trains by integrating both into its Ponzi scheme.

We have released 150,000 NFTs, which will be integrated into the game and the community. And now, we are building up our Fandom Metaverse, where fans can interact, connect, and compete with each other.

The vision is to have a Fan Metaverse where all the different fan communities can see and visit each other and to gather as many fans as possible to construct a virtual city.

The above is quoted from a June 2022 article published on SuperOne’s website.

Fast forward to 2023 and metaverse and NFT grifts are as dead as a doornail.

As per yet another reboot in mid May 2023 (deceivingly being pitched as a “prelaunch”), SuperOne is returning to their failed trivia app roots.

The hope now is to pump SRX by specifically targeting football players.

The Company

Back in 2020 SuperOne was incorporated as SuperOne Limited, a UK shell company.

As of 2023 SuperOne is set up through two layers of shell companies in Gibraltar; SuperOne Limited and SuperLabs Limited;

In actuality SuperOne is and always has been run by owner Andreas Christensen out of Norway:

SuperOne’s Products

SuperOne’s trivia app is free to play with microtransactions.

The latest marketing ruse is tailoring the trivia to sports. The idea is that football fans will be manipulated into thinking answering trivia questions and buying NFTs equates to supporting their club.

It should be noted that SuperOne has no direct partnerships with any of the players or sporting clubs in their marketing material.

Photos of players are purportedly stock images licensed through ShutterStock:

This is something Andreas Christensen has been doing for over a decade:

SuperOne hopes to recruit new SRX token bagholders through Goal.com, who it claims can provide them exposure to “800 million fans”.

In an attempt to verify this I ran a search for “superone” appearing on Goal.com’s website:

Oddly enough when I clicked through on any results SuperOne wasn’t mentioned on the linked pages. I 
think
this is just SuperOne buying advertising but I’m no


🤖 Quick Answer

What was SuperOne's original business model when it launched in 2018?
SuperOne operated as a smart-contract Ponzi scheme utilizing SuperOne tokens (SRX), with 2 billion tokens created. Andreas Christensen, the owner, controlled half the token supply, creating financial incentives to increase token value for personal profit.

How did SuperOne attempt to revive its failed initial launch?
Following the original iteration's collapse, SuperOne was rebooted in 2020 with a mobile trivia application. This integrated Mowjow, a previously unsuccessful quiz app company Christensen had established in 2013.

What was the intended revenue mechanism of SuperOne's trivia app?
The strategy relied on new trivia app users eventually spending money within the platform, enabling Christensen and original token holders to generate profits and cash out their investments.


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