Nexxano Review: AI grift Roxxtter Club pyramid reboot
Nexxano fails to provide ownership or executive information on its website.
Nexxano operates from three known website domains:
- nexxano.com – privately registered on June 20th, 2025
- nexxano.app – privately registered on an unknown date
- nexx.site (root domain disabled, used for promoter referral URLs) – privately registered on June 13th, 2025
On Nexxano’s .APP website, we find an “imprint” page. This brings up Nexxano L.L.C.-FZ, a purported Dubai registered company:
“Imprint” website pages are a legal requirement in German-speaking countries. This suggests whoever is running Nexxano has ties to a German-speaking county.
One name we can attach to Nexxano is Martin Stein.
As above, Nexxano marketing material presents Stein as a “TUV Rheinland certified AI consultant”. He’s also the CEO of Proxxolut GmbH, a German company purportedly based out of Cologne.
The Nexxano marketing slide above specifically credits Stein with “management and coordination of [Nexxano’s] internal AI expert team”.
In this management role Stein is claimed to be
responsible for the development of [Nexxano’s] AI software, AI agents and technical implementation.
Nexxano popped up on BehindMLM’s radar courtesy of preliminary research by reader Melanie.
Nexxano marketing material cited by Melanie back in mid July, suggests Roxxtter Club promoter details had been transferred over to Nexxano.
those of you, who have registered with NEXXANO already correctly – via the ROXXTTER Club backoffice – should by now have received their voucher code for their FREE FAST START PACK in the value of $295,00 – congratulations!
All you have to do now is follow the instructions you have received by email from ROXXTTER.
Roxxtter Club was a murky MLM pyramid scheme feeder launched in early 2024.
In March 2024 Melanie tied Martin Stein’s company Proxxolut GmbH to Roxxtter Club.
Based on all of this, it’s not unreasonable to suggest Martin Stein was probably behind Roxxtter Club, and is most likely behind Nexxano.
Company names with a “double X” seems to be Stein’s thing.
As for Nexxano hiding behind a Dubai shell company; Due to the proliferation of scams and failure to enforce securities fraud regulation, BehindMLM ranks Dubai as the MLM crime capital of the world.
BehindMLM’s guidelines for Dubai are:
- If someone lives in Dubai and approaches you about an MLM opportunity, they’re trying to scam you.
- If an MLM company is based out of or represents it has ties to Dubai, it’s a scam.
If you want to know specifically how this applies to Nexxano, read on for a full review.
Nexxano’s Products
Nexxano markets access to “countless digital projects, smart AI tools, and automated income”.
Examples cited in Nexxano offsite marketing presentations include AI-assisted marketing funnels, a website generators.
Specific access ties into Nexxano promoter membership tiers:
- Boost ($55 a month) – AI marketing spam platform
- Turbo ($195 a month) – adds AI automation platform
- Nitro ($345 a month) – AI Agent platform
Based on Nexxano’s marketing website, they appear to have just white labeled ChatGPT:
Nexxano’s Compensation Plan
Nexxano’s compensation plan pays on the sale of memberships to retail customers and recruited promoters. Recruitment commissions are also paid out separately.
Each Nexxano promoter tier has a corresponding sales volume amount (BV):
- Boost tier = 25 BV a month
- Turbo tier = 90 BV a month
- Nitro tier = 160 BV a month
Nexxano’s paid promoter membership (Pro @ $250 annually), generates 125 BV.
MLM commissions are calculated as a percentage of these BV amounts.
Initial Fee Commissions
Nexxano pays commissions as a percentage of BV generated down two levels of referral/recruitment:
- level 1 (personally recruited promoters) – 75%
- level 2 – 5%
Note that in order to qualify for Initial Fee Commissions, a Nexxano promoter must have an active membership themselves (Boost, Turbo or Nitro).
Residual Commissions
Nexxano pays residual commissions via a unilevel compensation structure.
A unilevel compensation structure places a promoter at the top of a unilevel team, with every personally recruited promoter placed directly under them (level 1):
If any level 1 promoters recruit new promoters, they are placed on level 2 of the original promoter’s unilevel team.
If any level 2 promoters recruit new promoters, they are placed on level 3 and so on and so forth down a theoretical infinite number of levels.
Nexxano caps payable unilevel team levels at twenty.
Residual commissions are paid across these twenty levels as follows:
- free tier Nexxano promoters only earn 10% on level 1 (personally referred retail customers and recruited promoters)
- paid Pro Nexxano promoters earn 10% on level 1, 5% on level 2, 4% on level 3, 3% on level 4 and 0.5% on levels 5 to 20
Note the catch with Pro Nexxano residual commissions is one additional promoter must be recruited in order to unlock each unilevel team level. E.g. two promoters must be recruited to unlock level 2, three promoters recruited to unlock level 3 etc.
Recruited promoters for residual commissions must have either an active monthly membership themselves, or have referred an active retail customer.
Other commissions and bonuses
Other commissions and bonuses paid out by Nexxano include a “Powerline Bonus” and “World Bonus Pool”.
Unfortunately while we can confirm MLM, Nexxano hides full compensation plan details from consumers.
Joining Nexxano
Nexxano promoter membership is either free or $250 annually for Pro.
Nexxano marketing presentations state free Nexxano promoter membership provides access to a “basic backoffice”.
The $250 Pro backoffice provides access to “advanced tools & analytics”, “all sources of income” and “full commissions”.
It should be noted that Roxxtter Club promoters were gifted into Nexxano ahead of the public.
Early Nexxano joiners were also offered a $995 “VIP AI Focus Group” annual membership tier, giving them a financial advantage over promoters who joined after August 2025.
Nexxano Conclusion
Roxxter Club kinda just quietly fizzled out after it launched last year. Perhaps not surprisingly, Roxxter Club’s marketing ruse was “digital marketing products”.
Nexxano is more of the same from the same people under a different name. With an added AI grift.
Nexxano offers a much more simple compensation plan over Roxxter Club, but without adequate retail sales it’s still a pyramid scheme.
With Roxxtter Club collapsing we know there is no retail customer base. The majority, if not all AI marketing membership fees in Nexxano are likely purchased by promoters.
Forcing Nexxano promoters to have an active Boost, Turbo or Nitro membership all but guarantees this.
This makes logical sense. AI LLM models are everywhere. Why would anyone outside of Nexxano’s income opportunity pay up to $345 a month for repackaged ChatGPT?
I also want to note another name I came across in a Nexxano marketing webinar:
Skainet Systems was an MLM AI trading bot Ponzi run out of Dubai. Michael Baur (apparently aka Michael Bauer), a German national hiding out in Dubai, was the face of the scam.
Skainet Systems collapsed in June 2025, after which Baur went underground. On social media Baur goes by “Micha Baur”. Recent posts suggest Baur is holidaying with wife Karyna Baur in Indonesia.
Baur having an account in Nexxano as “Skainet CMO” suggests Skainet’s promoter database might have been sold off.
As with all MLM pyramid schemes, once promoter recruitment dries up so too will commissions.
This will see those at the bottom of the Nexxano pyramid scheme eventually stop paying monthly fees.
This in turn means those above these promoters will also stop getting paid. Unless new victims are found, these promoters will eventually also stop paying monthly fees.
Once enough Nexxano promoters inevitably stop paying monthly fees, an irreversible collapse is triggered.
Math guarantees that when a pyramid scheme collapses, the majority of participants lose money. Look no further than Roxxter Club and Skainet Systems to see this in action.
I always tell people that if an “opportunity” has more than 2 sites, it’s most likely a scam. I mean, how many websites does a “business” truly need?
Great job on this one, as always, Oz! I don’t know much about German law and I appreciate your due diligence of knowing and including that information. Makes me want to go learn about it more now.