Inside Lottoday, Mavie Global’s NFT grift Ponzi
Lottoday emerged in mid 2023 as a gambling ruse within the Mavie Global.
That seems to have come and gone. Now Lottoday is an NFT Ponzi grift, in addition to Mavie Global’s Ultron shitcoin Ponzi.
Mavie Global is dressing up its latest Ponzi ruse through Lottoday as “gaming hub NFTs”.
Lottoday of course has nothing to do with gaming. Mavie Global affiliates invest 100 to 100,000 USDT into NFT investment positions.
This is done on the promise of a passive daily return, or “daily returns” as Mavie Global puts it in their Lottoday marketing.
Lottoday NFT returns cap out at 1000%…
…from a 200 USDT ROI on a 100 USDT investment, to 1,000,000 USDT ROI on a 100,000 USDT investment.
And of course early Mavie Global Lottoday investors are able to cash out faster than the bagholders who invest after them.
As with Mavie Global and its original Ultron Ponzi scheme, Lottoday isn’t registered with financial regulators in any jurisdiction.
As of January 2023, SimilarWeb tracks top sources of traffic to Lottoday’s website as Hungary (27%), Russia (11%), Kazakhstan (10%) France (9%) and Spain (6%).
Corresponding securities regulators for these jurisdictions are:
- Hungary – National Bank of Hungary
- Russia – Central Bank of Russia
- Kazakhstan – Agency of the Republic of Kazakhstan for Regulation and Development of Financial Market
- France – Autorité des Marchés Financiers
- Spain – Comisión Nacional del Mercado de Valores
By failing to register its Lottoday securities offering with financial regulators, Mavie Global is committing securities fraud.
This leaves consumers unable to verify claims of Lottoday generating external revenue through its gaming platform.
The reason for this is there is no revenue. Lottoday is a Ponzi scheme.
Mavvie Global is run by former Givvo Ponzi scammer Michal Prazenica.
Native to Europe, Prazenica has since fled to Dubai. Sheltered by Dubai’s authorities, Mavie Global continues to defraud consumers across Europe.
A lot of scammers were on stage at the event of Mavie in Mexico.
Andrea Cimbala, Brenda Lopez, Yuriria Estrada Aviles, Freddy Cortez.
It says on their website that they had a successful audit done by a company called Certik. Is that a reliable company?
Certik isn’t a financial regulator. For the purpose of MLM due-diligence anything they do is meaningless.
I invested $300 with them in Ultron, didn’t buy any Lottoday or FlipMe NFT’s, but the fact that I can’t sell my Ultron coin NFT for 5 years was a red flag for me because it wasn’t explained to me before I made the purchase.
Do you think I’ll be able to get any money back from them after these 5 years? Luckily, I only put $300 in this so I’m not too fussed about it.
The thing is, this Ponzi scheme is really well thought out and if you don’t dig deeper, it really looks like a good investment, that’s why they were able to get a lot of money from people until now and they will probably continue to attract a lot of people.
Not legitimately. You invested into a Ponzi scheme run out of Dubai, your $300 is good as gone.
That’s what I thought, I do want to invest in crypto though so I will probably do it through a company like [removed].
With Mavie, you get 7% from any investment another person makes (that you brought into the company) and 10% from what your team brings in (if you have one).
If that’s what it takes to get any money back, screw it, I’ll consider it lost.