The EasyMatic Ponzi scheme has collapsed.

Launched roughly a month ago, attempts to visit EasyMatic’s website now redirect to the domain “articon.in”.

This suggests whoever was behind the Ponzi scheme has ties to India.

EasyMatic was a simple Ponzi scheme promising daily returns of 0.5% to 1%, capped at 200%.

Affiliates invested polygon (MATIC), across three investment tiers:

  • Easy Starer – invest 50 to 500 MATIC and receive 0.5% a day
  • Easy Rapid – invest 550 to 2500 MATIC and receive 0.75% a day
  • Easy Rocket – invest 2550 or more MATIC and receive 1% a day

EasyMatic affiliates could boost their daily ROI rate via recruitment.

Referral commissions on invested MATIC were paid out down three levels of recruitment:

  • level 1 (personally recruited affiliates) – 5%
  • level 2 – 3%
  • level 3 – 2%

EasyMatic also offered a match on ROI payments made to downline affiliates, paid down thirty levels of recruitment:

  • level 1 – 20% match
  • level 2 – 10% match (must recruit 2 affiliates)
  • level 3 – 5% match (must recruit 3 affiliates)
  • level 4 – 3% match (must recruit 4 affiliates)
  • levels 5 to 10 – 2% match (must recruit 5 affiliates)
  • levels 11 to 20 – 1.5% match (must recruit 6 affiliates and have generated 10,000 MATIC investment by personally recruited affiliates)
  • levels 21 to 27 – 1% match (must maintain 6 personally recruited affiliates and have generated 50,000 MATIC investment by personally recruited affiliates)
  • level 28 – 5% match (must maintain 6 personally recruited affiliates and have generated 65,000 MATIC investment by personally recruited affiliates)
  • level 29 – 5% match (must maintain 6 personally recruited affiliates and have generated 80,000 MATIC investment by personally recruited affiliates)
  • level 30 – 20% match (must maintain 6 personally recruited affiliates and have generated 100,000 MATIC investment by personally recruited affiliates)

On the promotional side of things there are robo voice marketing videos from Indian EasyMatic shills on YouTube.

There is also a private EasyMatic FaceBook group, run by admins Brian Rhodes, Alan Driggers and Lawrence Jacobs.

BehindMLM came across Rhodes earlier this year as part of our coverage into FastBNB’s Ponzi collapse.

That’s Rhodes looking uncomfortable top right.

Math guarantees the majority of MATIC investors lost money to EasyMatic’s owner(s), as well as promoting scammers like Rhodes, Driggers and Jacobs.

The total number of EasyMatic victims and how much they lost is unclear.