DigitalBot Review: Collapsed Optimus VIP Ponzi reboot
DigitalBot fails to provide ownership or executive information on its website.
DigitalBot’s website domain (“digitalbot.app”), was privately registered on an unknown date.
Further research reveals offsite marketing citing Antonio Salas as DigitalBot’s founder.
Salas, a Brazilian national, is behind the recently collapsed Optimus VIP Ponzi scheme.
Optimus VIP collapsed in March 2025. BehindMLM covered the collapse on March 25th and noted a DigitalCredit reboot.
DigitalCredit appears to have already collapsed. DigitalCredit’s website domain now redirects to “migrationoptdc.com”, which funnels victims into DigitalBot.
Salas is believed to run his MLM crypto Ponzi schemes from Brazil.
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.
DigitalBot’s Products
DigitalBot has no retailable products or services.
Affiliates are only able to market DigitalBot affiliate membership itself.
DigitalBot’s Compensation Plan
DigitalBot affiliates invest 10 to 100,000 tether (USDT). This is done on the promise of 1.4% a day.
Note that DigitalBot returns are capped at 200%, which includes MLM commissions.
Once 200% has been reached, reinvestment is required to continue earning.
The MLM side of DigitalBot pays on recruitment of affiliate investors.
Referral Commissions
DigitalBot pays a 10% referral commission on USDT invested by personally recruited affiliates.
Residual Commissions
DigitalBot pays residual commissions via a binary compensation structure.
A binary compensation structure places an affiliate at the top of a binary team, split into two sides (left and right):
The first level of the binary team houses two positions. The second level of the binary team is generated by splitting these first two positions into another two positions each (4 positions).
Subsequent levels of the binary team are generated as required, with each new level housing twice as many positions as the previous level.
Positions in the binary team are filled via direct and indirect recruitment of affiliates. Note there is no limit to how deep a binary team can grow.
Every twelve hours DigitalBot tallies up new investment volume on both sides of the binary team.
Residual commissions are paid as 8% of new investment on the weaker binary team side.
Once paid out, volume is matched against the stronger binary team side and flushed. Leftover volume on the stronger binary team side carries over.
Joining DigitalBot
DigitalBot affiliate membership is free.
Full participation in the attached income opportunity requires a minimum 10 USDT investment.
DigitalBot Conclusion
There’s not much to DigitalBot, it’s the same “automated trading” nonsense Antonio Salas launched Optimus VIP with.
There is no trading. Notwithstanding Optimus VIP collapsing when new investment ran out, if there was trading Salas would register with regulators and file audited financial reports.
This is a legal requirement, failing which Optimus VIP and DigitalBot are committing securities fraud.
As it stands the only verifiable source of revenue entering DigitalBot is new investment.
Using new investment to pay ROI withdrawals would make DigitalBot a Ponzi scheme. Additionally, with nothing marketed or sold to retail customers, the MLM side of DigitalBot operates as a pyramid scheme.
As with all MLM Ponzi schemes, once affiliate recruitment runs dry so too will new new investment.
This will starve DigitalBot of ROI revenue, eventually prompting a collapse.
The math behind Ponzi schemes guarantees that when they collapse, the majority of participants lose money.
Look no further than Optimus VIP to see this in action.
And be wary of Optimus VIP victims promoting DigitalBot in an attempt to recoup their losses (read: pass them on to you).
Hat tip to Danny de Hek for the heads up on this one – dehek.com/general/ponzi-scheme-scamalerts/digitalbot-tech-exposed-rebranded-crypto-scam-from-optimus-vip-digitalcredit/