MC Football Review: Football themed “click a button” Ponzi
MC Football provides no information about who owns or runs the company on its website.
MC Football’s website domain (“mc858.com”), was privately re-registered through a Chinese registrar on January 26th, 2022.
Visiting MC Football’s website reveals it’s just a gateway to the company’s app.
If we take a look at MC Football’s website source-code, we find it is set to Chinese localization:
Despite this, MC Football is primarily marketed to Spanish-speaking investors.
SimilarWeb reports top sources of traffic to MC Football’s website are Venezuela (58%), Spain (20%), Argentina (10%) and Colombia (4%).
Traffic to MC Football’s website took a slump in April but grew across May.
Robo narrated MC Football marketing videos represent MC Football stands for “Manchester City Football Club”:
The online platform was founded in 2017 and has launched online football investment. It is a joint venture holding company between the United Arab Emirates, the United Kingdom and China.
Needless to say MC Football has absolutely nothing to do with Manchester City Football Club, or any “joint venture holding company”.
MC Football was launched in early 2022 by serial Chinese Ponzi scammers.
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.
MC Football’s Products
MC Football has no retailable products or services.
Affiliates are only able to market MC Football affiliate membership itself.
MC Football’s Compensation Plan
MC Football affiliates invest tether (USDT), on the promise of advertised returns.
Returns offered through MC Football are variable daily rates, paid under the ruse of sports betting.
The highest daily percentage I saw offered through MC Football was 3.07%.
The MLM side of MC Football pays on recruitment of affiliate investors.
Referral Commissions
MC Football pays referral commissions on initial investment by recruited affiliates down two levels of recruitment:
- if a new recruit invests 30 USDT, the affiliate who recruited them gets nothing and their upline gets 5 USDT
- if a new recruit invests 100 USDT, the affiliate who recruited them and their upline gets 8 USDT
- if a new recruit invests 300 USDT, the affiliate who recruited them gets 15 USDT and their upline gets 12 USDT
- if a new recruit invests 600 USDT, the affiliate who recruited them gets 40 USDT and their upline gets 18 USDT
- if a new recruit invests 1000 USDT, the affiliate who recruited them gets 80 USDT and their upline gets 25 USDT
- if a new recruit invests 3000 USDT, the affiliate who recruited them gets 280 USDT and their upline gets 50 USDT
- if a new recruit invests 5000 USDT, the affiliate who recruited them gets 420 USDT and their upline gets 100 USDT
- if a new recruit invests 10,000 USDT, the affiliate who recruited them gets 1000 USDT and their upline gets 300 USDT
- if a new recruit invests 30,000 USDT, the affiliate who recruited them gets 3680 USDT and their upline gets 880 USDT
Residual Commissions
MC Football pays residual commissions on invested funds down three levels of recruitment (unilevel):
- level 1 (personally recruited affiliates) – 10%
- level 2 – 5%
- level 3 – 3%
Monthly Salary
MC Football affiliates who achieve set downline quotas qualify for a monthly salary.
- Personal Agency – build a downline of 50 to 500 investing affiliates and receive 200 to 3000 USDT a month
- Town Level Manager – build a downline of 1000 to 5000 investing affiliates and receive 7000 to 30,000 USDT a month
- Township Agency Manager – build a downline of 10,000 to 30,000 investing affiliates and receive 50,000 to 100,000 USDT a month
- City-level Agency Manager – build a downline of 30,001 to 50,000 investing affiliates and receive 100,000 to 300,000 USDT a month
- Provincial Acting Manager – build a downline of 50,000 to 80,000 investing affiliates and receive 300,000 to 800,000 USDT a month
- County Agency Manager – build a downline of 80,000 to 100,000 investing affiliates and receive 800,000 to 2,000,000 USDT a month
- African Agent Manager – build a downline of 100,000 to 300,000 investing affiliates and receive 2,000,000 to 6,000,000 USDT a month
Joining MC Football
MC Football affiliate membership is free.
Full participation in the attached income opportunity requires investment in tether.
MC Football Conclusion
MC Football is yet another “click a button” app Ponzi scheme.
Affiliates invest tether and are required to “click a button”. MC Football represents clicking a button is tied to gambling on football match outcomes.
In fact all MC Football are doing is recycling invested funds to pay returns.
MC Football is part of a group of “click a button” app Ponzis launched over the past few months.
Thus far BehindMLM has documented:
- COTP – pretended affiliates clicking a button generated trading activity, collapsed May 2022
- EthTRX is a similar app-based Ponzi, with the daily task component disabled
- Yu Klik – pretends clicking a button generates trading activity, targeting Indonesia
- KKBT – pretended clicking a button generates crypto mining revenue, targeted South Africa and India & collapsed early June 2022
- EasyTask 888 – pretends clicking a button was tied to social media manipulation (YouTube likes), targets Colombia
- DF Finance – pretended clicking a button generated “purchase data” which was sold to ecommerce platforms, collapsed June 2022
- Shared989 – pretended clicking a button was tied to social media manipulation (YouTube likes etc.), collapsed June 2022
- 86FB – pretended clicking a button was tied to gambling on football match outcomes, collapsed April 2022
- 0W886 – pretended clicking a button was tied to gambling on football match outcomes, collapsed May 2022
- U91 – pretended clicking a button was tied to gambling on football match outcomes, collapsed May 2022
- 365Ball – pretends clicking a button is tied to gambling on football match outcomes, (has collapsed multiple already)
- YLCH Football – pretends clicking a button is tied to gambling on football match outcomes
- Parkour – pretends clicking a button is tied to social media manipulation (YouTube likes etc.)
- OTCAI – pretended affiliates clicking a button generated trading activity, collapsed May 2022
- N9 Football – pretended affiliates clicking a button was tied to gambling on football match outcomes, collapsed May 2022
- Tron.BI – pretends affiliates clicking a button was tied to TRX cloud mining
- EFG Football – pretended affiliates clicking a button was tied to gambling on football match outcomes, collapsed May 2022
- GP Football – pretended affiliates clicking a button was tied to gambling on football match outcomes, collapsed May 2022
- Lucky Football, pretended affiliates clicking a button was tied to gambling on football match outcomes, collapsed May 2022
- WT91 – pretends affiliates clicking a button is tied to gambling on football match outcomes
- Mars Football – pretends affiliates clicking a button is tied to gambling on football match outcomes
All the recent app-based task Ponzis appear to be launched by the same group of scammers.
Based on the use of simplified Chinese, I suspect the group are operating out of China or Singapore.
Aaaand that brings our speed run through the entire MLM “click a button” Ponzi niche to a close.
Well, at least the Ponzis I had on my list and came across today. I’m sure there’s others.
Seeing as these Chinese scammers are hell-bent on churn scamming Africa and South America, I’ll be prioritizing these cookie-cutter Ponzis as they come up.
Back to regular broadcasting tomorrow.
(Stands, offers epic slow-clap) Well done, Oz! You’ve always been prolific, but this is a new record!
Not sure if it counts, a lot of it was repetitive as they were just recycling their script with new graphics.
Thought about doing a combined article with a list but decided it’d be better to document each Ponzi.
I figured if any donkeys come on here to defend their “click a button” Ponzi, that way they’d be clobbered with the sheer amount of evidence present.
Speaking of repetitive, the reason for my double post was because the first seemed to get swallowed. Then so did the second, so I quit while I was behind.
I later saw both comments on the home page, and the comment count had gone up in the article link, but no matter how many different ways I revisited and reloaded the article itself, (i.e, this one), it was no esta.
So I let it be, figuring you’d clean up after me, and you did; thanks.
Copy/paste or no, seventeen articles in one day has got to be a long session, so my slow-clap stands.
That sounds like cache kicking in. Helps DDOS attacks.
Should update every 5 or 10 mins. Can try CTRL-F5 forcing it otherwise it’ll update when it’s ready.