HHG Staking fails to provide ownership or executive information on its website.

HHG Staking operates from two known website domains:

  1. hhgstaking.com – registered with bogus details on February 28th, 2025
  2. stakinghg.com – registered with bogus details on February 26th, 2025

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.

HHG Staking’s Products

HHG Staking has no retailable products or services.

Affiliates are only able to market HHG Staking affiliate membership itself.

HHG Staking’s Compensation Plan

HHG Staking affiliates invest tether (USDT). This is done on the promise of advertised returns:

  • HHG 24 Hours Project – invest 6 to 16 USDT and receive 10% a day
  • HHG 72 Hours Project – invest 16 to 50 USDT and receive 13% a day
  • HHG Startup Plan – invest 50 to 600 USDT and receive 15% a day
  • HHG Standard Plan – invest 600 to 3000 USDT and receive 18% a day
  • HHG Intermediate Plan – invest 3000 to 10,000 USDT and receive 25% a day
  • HHG Premium Plan – invest 10,000 to 50,000 USDT and receive 28% a day
  • HHG Deluxe Plan – invest 50,000 to 100,000 USDT and receive 30% a day
  • HHG Supreme Edition Plan – invest 100,000 to 500,000 USDT and receive 35% a day
  • HHG Limited Edition Project – invest 500,000 USDT or more and receive 39% a day

HHG Staking pays referral commissions on invested USDT down three levels of recruitment (unilevel):

  • recruit one affiliate investor and receive 10% on level 1 (personally recruited affiliates), 3% on level 2 and 2% on level 3
  • recruit thirty affiliate investors and receive 15% on level 1, 2% on level 2 and 1% on level 3
  • recruit one hundred affiliate investors and receive 16% on level 1, 2% on level 2 and 1% on level 3
  • recruit one thousand affiliate investors and receive 22% on level 1, 6% on level 2 and 3% on level 3

Joining HHG Staking

HHG Staking affiliate membership is free.

Full participation in the attached income opportunity requires a minimum 6 USDT investment.

HHG Staking Conclusion

HHG Staking is yet another “click a button” app Ponzi scheme.

HHG Staking’s Ponzi ruse is baloney about AI robots mixed with fund management.

The smart AI-based fund management system automatically accumulates and distributes incoming investments and their payouts.

To that end HHG Staking’s website is marketing fluff designed to funnel victims to its downloadable app.

The presented ruse is HHG Staking affiliates log in and click a buttons corresponding with AI-assisted staking.

Clicking the button purportedly generates revenue via staking, which for some reason HHG Staking shares a percentage of with affiliate investors.

If that makes no sense it’s because it doesn’t. Randoms clicking a button in an app doesn’t generate revenue.

In reality clicking a button inside HHG Staking’s app does nothing. All Invest HHG Staking does is recycle newly invested funds to pay earlier investors.

Examples of recently collapsed “click a button” app Ponzis using the same AI robot ruse are Aifeex, AI Profit USDT and Nexus666.

Since 2021 BehindMLM has documented hundreds of “click a button” app Ponzis. Most of them last a few weeks to a few months before collapsing.

“Click a button” app Ponzis disappear by disabling both their websites and app. This tends to happen without notice, leaving the majority of investors with a loss (inevitable Ponzi math).

In the lead up to a collapse, “click a button” Ponzi investors also tend to find their accounts locked. This typically coincides with a withdrawal request.

As part of a collapse, “click a button” Ponzi scammers often initiate recovery scams. This sees the scammers demand investors pay a fee to access funds and/or re enable withdrawals.

If any payments are made withdrawals remain disabled or the scammers cease communication.

Organized crime interests from China operate scam factories behind “click a button” Ponzis from south-east Asian countries.

In September 2024, the US Department of Treasury sanctioned Cambodian politician Ly Yong Phat over ties to Chinese human trafficking scam factories.

Through various companies he owns, Phat is alleged to shelter Chinese scammers operating out of Cambodia.

Myanmar claims to have deported over 50,000 Chinese scam factory scammers since October 2023. With “click a button” app scams continuing to feature on BehindMLM though, it is clearly not enough.

In late January 2025, Chinese ministry representatives visited Thailand. The stated aim of the visit was to tackle organized Chinese crime gangs operating from Myanmar.

In early February 2025, Thailand announced it had cut power, internet access and petrol supplies to Chinese scam factories operating across its border with Myanmar.

As of February 20th, Thai and Chinese authorities claim ten thousand trafficked hostages had been freed from Myanmar compounds.

Also on February 20th, five Chinese crime bosses were nabbed in a wider raid of four hundred and fifty arrests in the Philippines.

On March 19th it was reported that, despite the recent raids and arrests, “up to 100,000 people” are still working in Chinese Myanmar scam factories.

As of April 2025 and in response to a crackdown across Asia, newly opened Chinese scam factories have been reported in Nigeria, Angola and Brazil.

Regardless of which country they operate from, ultimately the same group of Chinese scammers are believed to be behind the “click a button” app Ponzi plague.