BioLimitless fails to provide ownership or executive information on its website.

In fact as I write this, BioLimitless’ website is nothing more than an affiliate sign in form:

In Late July BioLimitless held a prelaunch event in Arizona. The event was run by Jeremy Roma…

…and Joshua Denne:

Eric Nepute also appears on BioLimitless corporate presentations:

Roma is also a former Investview executive. Roma is still tied to Investview through shares issued to Freedom Enterprises LLC, of which Roma is the Managing Partner of.

As of May 2024, Investview is the subject of an SEC investigation into suspected iGenius related securities fraud.

Roma is also co-founder and the face of the Daisy Global Ponzi schemes.

The last iteration of Daisy Global collapsed in December 2023. A “Blockchain Sports” reboot materialized in February 2024 but failed to gain any traction.

As of July 2024 Roma and co-conspirators Eduard Khemchan and Ilya Marin were still gaslighting Daisy Ponzi victims over their losses.

It is against this backdrop of widespread financial destruction that Roma is launching BioLimitless.

Joshua Denne is a twice convicted felon. Denne pled guilty to felony drug and gun charges in 1998. He was also convicted of insurance fraud in 2011.

In 2020, Denne was tied to COVID-19 mask contract grifting in California.

Joshua Denne appeared on BehindMLM’s radar in 2023, as CEO of Blockchain Alliance.

Denne is also a former Daisy Global Ponzi promoter:

While Blockchain Alliance’s website is still up, the SSL security certificate has lapsed.

Blockchain Alliance’s official FaceBook page was abandoned in January 2024. Its official Twitter profile was abandoned a few months later in May.

Eric Nepute is a chiropractor from Missouri. Prior to getting involved in BioLimitless Nepute ran Quickwork LLC.

In April 2021 the DOJ and FTC filed a civil suit against Nepute and QuickWork LLC over bogus COVID-19 claims;

In a complaint filed on April 15, 2021, the government alleged that the defendants made misleading and unsubstantiated advertising claims that their Vitamin D and Zinc supplements could be used to treat or prevent COVID-19, and in fact provide equal or better protection against COVID-19 than the available COVID-19 vaccines.

The complaint also alleged that the defendants had mischaracterized the results of scientific studies to support some of their claims.

Nepute was also reported to have been running around telling people tonic water treated COVID-19.

QuickWork LLC settled with the DOJ for $1 million, “partially suspended due to an inability to pay.”

On July 19, the court granted partial summary judgment against Nepute, finding that there was no reasonable basis in the record to support claims that Zinc can treat or prevent COVID-19, or that Vitamin D or Zinc provide equal or better protection against COVID-19 than the available COVID-19 vaccines.

In an order entered on Aug. 2, Nepute agreed to an injunction and to pay $80,000 in civil penalties.

Nepute’s injunction prohibited him from making further deceptive claims regarding COVID-19.

The court’s injunctions prohibit the defendants from advertising that their supplements can prevent, cure, mitigate, or treat COVID-19 without competent and reliable scientific evidence to support such claims.

The defendants are also banned from misrepresenting the results of COVID-19 research in their advertising.

The defendants agreed to pay damages in the event that they make prohibited representations in the future.

With BioLimitless, Nepute appears to be violating the terms of his court-ordered injunction.

BioLimitless is marketing an ebook authored by Nepute titled “Become Limitless”:

At page 38 in the book, Nepute writes;

The pandemic was a critical juncture in my career. As our clinics navigated the crisis, we employed holistic and preventative measures that proved effective.

Despite our success, we faced significant backlash. The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) accused me under the COVID Consumer Protection Act, alleging I misled patients about the necessity of vaccines when promoting the importance of nutrition and immune support.

This lawsuit, which demanded an astronomical $508 billion, underscored the lengths to which authorities would go to suppress alternative viewpoints.

After a nearly four-year legal battle, I was exonerated. This victory was not just personal but a testament to the importance of scientific integrity and the value of holistic health approaches.

I’ve linked to and quoted what actually happened above. I don’t know why Nepute is lying about the injunction and monetary penalty he agreed to, but those now published lies would appear to be a violation of the court’s order.

BioLimitless operates from two known website domains:

  1. biolimitless.life – privately registered on May 21st, 2024; and
  2. biolimitlessdirect.com – privately registered on April 29th, 2024

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.

BioLimitless’ Products

BioLimitless markets a “DNA Discovery Kit” and several nutritional supplements:

  • DNA Discovery Kit – “an easy to perform genetic test providing an in-depth analysis of your genetic makeup”, retails at 910 USDT
  • Master Microbiotics – probiotic supplement, retails at 300 USDT for a 30-day supply
  • Cell Signalling formula – “a unique Tri-Peptide formula designed to signal your cells to communicate & function more efficiently”, sold with a bottle of Master Microbiotics for 1030 USDT (three month supply)

BioLimitless’ products are also sold in an “all in pack” for 1730 USDT.

BioLimitless’ Compensation Plan

BioLimitless’ compensation plan pays on the sale of supplements to retail customers and recruited affiliates.

BioLimitless Affiliate Ranks

There are ten ranks within BioLimitless’ compensation plan.

Along with their respective qualification criteria, they are as follows:

  1. Rank 1 – sign up as a BioLimitless affiliate
  2. Rank 2 – recruit two affiliates who purchase BioLimitless products
  3. Rank 3 – generate 1000 USDT a month in downline sales volume
  4. Rank 4 – generate 25,000 USDT a month in downline sales volume
  5. Rank 5 – generate 50,000 USDT a month in downline sales volume
  6. Rank 6 – generate 100,000 USDT a month in downline sales volume
  7. Rank 7 – generate 250,000 USDT a month in downline sales volume
  8. Rank 8 – generate 1,000,000 USDT a month in downline sales volume
  9. Rank 9 – generate 2,000,000 USDT a month in downline sales volume
  10. Rank 10 – generate 3,000,000 USDT a month in downline sales volume

Note that no more than 50% of required downline sales volume can come from any one recruitment leg.

Retail Commissions

BioLimitless pays a 20% commission on sales volume generated by retail customer orders.

Recruitment Commissions

Recruited BioLimitless affiliates pay a “BioLimitless center crowdfunding license fee”.

BioLimitless takes this fee and uses it to pay recruitment commissions via a unilevel compensation structure.

A unilevel compensation structure places an affiliate at the top of a unilevel team, with every personally recruited affiliate placed directly under them (level 1):

If any level 1 affiliates recruit new affiliates, they are placed on level 2 of the original affiliate’s unilevel team.

If any level 2 affiliates recruit new affiliates, they are placed on level 3 and so on and so forth down a theoretical infinite number of levels.

BioLimitless caps recruitment commissions at ten unilevel team levels:

  • level 1 (personally recruited affiliates) – 20%
  • levels 2 and 3 – 10%
  • levels 4 to 7 – 5%
  • levels 8 to 10 – 10%

Note that each unilevel level corresponds to BioLimitless’ affiliate ranks. E.g. a Rank 4 BioLimitless affiliate only earns recruitment commissions up to level 4. A Rank 6 affiliate earns recruitment commissions up to level 6 etc.

Residual Commissions

BioLimitless pays residual commissions on repeat product purchases via the same unilevel team recruitment commissions are paid with (see “Recruitment Commissions” above):

  • level 1 – 8%
  • levels 2 and 3 – 4%
  • levels 4 to 7 – 3%
  • levels 8 to 10 – 4%

Champion And Legend Pools

BioLimitless takes breakage (breakage = MLM companies screwing distributors out of commissions and bonuses), and uses it to fund Champion and Legend pools.

  • affiliates qualify for shares in the Champion Pool by qualifying at Rank 4 (one share), Rank 5 (two shares) and Rank 6 (three shares)
  • affiliates qualify for shares in the Legend Pool by qualifying at Rank 8 (one share), Rank 9 (two shares) and Rank 10 (three shares)

Elite Pool

BioLimitless funds the Elite Pool with:

  1. 5% of company-wide product sales volume; and
  2. 10% of affiliate “crowdfunding license” fees

BioLimitless affiliates qualify for a share in the Elite Pool by generating 5 million USDT in accumulated downline sales volume.

Joining BioLimitless

BioLimitless affiliate membership appears to be attached to payment of “crowdfunding membership” and/or “license fees”.

Details and pricing do not appear to have been made public.

BioLimitless Conclusion

Other than Jeremy Roma and friends’ respective bank accounts, I’m not really sure who BioLimitless is for.

Based on BioLimitless’ obscene product pricing ($300 a month for a probiotic?), we can rule out retail customers.

That leaves disgruntled Daisy Global victims, who through non-participation in Blockchain Sports have signalled they’re done being fleeced.

I suspect the only people promoting BioLimitless are Daisy Ponzi net-winners, hoping to keep the gravy train rolling a little longer.

Combine that with its executives’ heavy baggage and, as an MLM company, BioLimitless is probably DOA.

Notwithstanding the following additional concerns:

  • BioLimitless’ use of cryptocurrency (potential commingling with Daisy Ponzi funds raises money laundering concerns);
  • BioLimitless’ ties to Dubai, the MLM crime capital of the world;
  • the DOJ and/or FTC revisiting Eric Nepute’s 2022 judgment and apparent injunction violations; and/or
  • Jeremy Roma’s Daisy Ponzi scamming eventually catching up to him via regulatory enforcement action(s)

Over the course of three Daisy Ponzi reboots and its fourth “already on its last legs” Blockchain Sports reboot, Roma and friends have scammed a lot of victims – many of whom are US residents.

Even with Roma running off to Dubai I can’t see that going unanswered long-term. All it’d take is a few complaints to the SEC and FBI to get the ball rolling, if that hasn’t already happened.

All said and done if you’re thinking about signing up for BioLimitless, all I can ask is why?

If you’re a Daisy Ponzi net-winner, you know as well as I do all your victims want is to recover their Daisy losses – and BioLimitless isn’t going to achieve that.

If you’re a Daisy Ponzi victim, giving more money to Jeremy Roma isn’t going to magically recoup your Daisy Ponzi losses. Those of you who fell for the last few Daisy Ponzi reboots already know this.

If you weren’t involved in Daisy, why get involved in BioLimitless at all? It’s not like probiotics aren’t readily available (again, $300 a month?!). The DNA kit seems to be a multivitamin sold on the premise it’s tailored based on DNA testing.

That’s fine but it’s a marketing schtick we’ve seen before, and for much cheaper.

Looking at how much BioLimitless are charging, that no product manufacturing information is disclosed is yet another due-diligence red flag.

That pretty much sums up BioLimitless as an MLM company – red flags everywhere.

 

Update 14th September 2024 – BioLimitless has announced a passive returns investment opportunity tied to clinic investment.