Rockit Gig Review: Confusing NucleoGenex spinoff (why?)
Rockit Gig fails to provide ownership or executive information on either of its websites.
Rockit Gig operates from two known website domains:
- rockitgig.com – privately registered on June 18th, 2024
- rockitgig.app (affiliate login) – privately registered through a Montana address on November 19th, 2024
Further research reveals Rockit Gig market videos featuring Robert Oblon, Cameron Corr and Mike Darling.
Over on Oblon’s personal FaceBook page, he cites himself as Rockit Gig’s CEO:
Oblon, who also goes by Rob Oblon, made a name for himself as President of the WorldVentures pyramid scheme.
Oblon also had a 5% ownership stake in the company and owned Travopoly, a travel vendor WorldVentures provided discount travel through.
Oblon left WorldVentures around the time the company filed a lawsuit against him in 2011. In its lawsuit WorldVentures accused Oblon and Travopoly of non-compete and non-solicitation contractual violations.
Travopoly continued on as a standalone vacation platform. In May 2016 BehindMLM reviewed Elevacity, an MLM company tied to FourOceans Global and Travopoly.
In 2018 Elevacity was rebooted as Elepreneurs. Elepreneurs was tied to parent company Sharing Services Inc., a publicly trading company losing millions of dollars annually.
Through Elepreneurs Sharing Services (now Sharing Services Global Corp), turned things around. Sharing Services generated $2.7 million in net earnings between 2019 and 2020.
Amid allegations of gross financial misconduct, Oblon was removed from Elepreneurs Board of Directors in 2020.
In 2021 Oblon resurfaced as founder and CEO of Amplefei. A statement from Oblon in 2022 suggested Amplefei failed to turn a profit.
Later that same year Amplefei was sold off to LaCore Enterprises. LaCore Enterprises merged Amplefei with Uforia Sciences to create Nucleogenex.
Nucleogenex’s website is still up and cites UClue Inc. as its parent company on its website. UClue Inc. is tied to LaCore Enterprises’ Texas corporate address.
There is no mention of Oblon on Nucleogenex’s website. In 2022 however Oblon, in his capacity as CEO of UClue Inc., signed a settlement pertaining to lead in “Hapinss” branded supplements.
Nucleogenex’s products feature on Rockit Gig’s website:
Given that Nucleogenex is still a LaCore Enterprises company, it appears Oblon, Nucleogenex and Rockit Gig are backed by LaCore Enterprises.
Failure to disclose ownership and executive information on Rockit Gig’s website is a potential violation of the FTC Act.
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.
Rockit Gig’s Products
While Rockit Gig lists products on its website, consumers are redirected to other websites to complete purchase.
- the wellness section of Rockit Gig’s website redirects to Nucleogenex’s website
- the weight loss section of Rockit Gig’s website redirects to Curbix’s website
- the coffee section of Rockit Gig’s website redirects to a “website and business” that was supposed to launch on February 1, 2025 but evidently didn’t (the “visit website” link is still disabled as of March 2025)
- the travel section of Rockit Gig’s website redirects to ‘s website (HappiTravel is believed to be owned either fully or partially by Robert Oblon)
Curbix is a company I haven’t heard of before. Curbix’s website ties it to Finalli Labs, which again appears to be tied to Robert Oblon;
While Rockit Gig links to other company’s products, no actual product information or retail pricing is provided on Rockit Gig’s website.
Rockit Gig’s Compensation Plan
Rockit Gig pays commissions on products purchases from common ownership third-party companies.
Rockit Gig Affiliate Ranks
There are five affiliate ranks within Rockit Gig’s compensation plan.
Along with their respective qualification criteria, they are as follows:
- CD1 – generate 2500 PV and wait for 7500 CSV to be generated under you
- CD2 – generate 5000 PV and wait for 15,000 CSV to be generated under you
- CD3 – generate 7500 PV and wait for 60,000 CSV to be generated under you
- CD4 – generate 10,000 PV, 40,000 GV and wait for 160,000 CSV to be generated under you
- CD5 – generate 15,000 PV, 60,000 GV and wait for 240,000 CSV to be generated under you
PV stands for “Personal Volume”. PV is generated by a Rockit Gig affiliate’s own purchases, that of their personally referred retail customers and personally recruited affiliates.
GV stands for “Group Volume”. GV is PV generated by an affiliate and their downline.
CSV stands for “Community Sales Volume”. CSV is PV generated by every Rockit Gig affiliate who joins after you (directly or indirectly recruited).
Retail and Referral Commissions
Rockit Gig pays a 30% to 33% commission on an affiliate’s personal sales. These are sales retail customers and recruited Rockit Gig affiliates.
Bonus Pools
Rockit Gig takes 7% to 17% of company-wide revenue and splits it across five rank-based bonus pools:
- CD1 ranked affiliates receive a share in a 15% pool
- CD2 ranked affiliates receive a share in a 15% pool
- CD3 ranked affiliates receive a share in a 15% pool
- CD4 ranked affiliates receive a share in a 20% pool
- CD5 ranked affiliates receive a share in a 25% pool
A sixth “Rocket Boss” pool is made up of the remaining 10%.
Rockit Gig affiliates qualify for a share in the monthly Rocket Boos pool by referring three customers within a rolling seven-day period.
Joining Rockit Gig
Rockit Gig affiliate membership is either:
- free with the sale of a product/service; or
- $10 a month
Rockit Gig Conclusion
What a mess. The biggest problem with Rockit Gig is the lack of disclosure around its sprawling interconnectivity with common ownership companies.
I don’t know why but Robert Oblon seems extremely adverse to simplification and publicly disclosing his involvement in MLM companies.
Perhaps the most frustrating part about Rockit Gig is the underlying business is simple: sell products, get paid. The execution however is atrocious.
Mirroring Elepreneurs being a pointless Elevacity reboot, I’m left wondering why Rockit Gig exists. Why couldn’t HappiTravel and whatever the coffee product is (Nucleogenex already markets coffee), just be added to Nucleogenex?
Instead we have this mess where consumers can’t order anything from Rockit Gig’s website, retail pricing details are not provided and each product spins off a separate website.
For the purpose of Rockit Gig’s compensation plan, how is all of this tracked? Is it seamless integration between what feels like a dozen companies? And if so, again why has this been set up in the most confusing way possible?
Beyond people already in Nucleogenex and HappiTravel, I can’t see Rockit Gig’s mess being worthwhile for anyone new to join.
While Rockit Gig’s compensation plan is simple enough to understand, fleshing out the company and associated companies definitely failed the headache test. Unless you already had a vested financial interest, why would you bother?
Generally speaking consulting isn’t part of BehindMLM’s reviews. Here though it’s so painfully obvious I can’t help myself:
- get rid of all the spinoff companies
- either keep Nucleogenex or rebrand it (as Rockit Gig or whatever)
- group the products under a single brand (this ties into getting rid of all the spinoff companies)
- either merge Rockit Gig’s compensation plan with Nucleogenex’s plan or get rid of one
- fully disclose the relationship with LaCore Enterprises
- present executive information on Rockit Gig’s website (or Nucleogenex, or whatever new MLM entity is created)
Honestly as is, like I said, I just wouldn’t bother. Toss in a few more product launches over the next year and how is Rockit Gig going to look? Just more unnecessary spinoff company complications.
The only reasoning I can come up with is, as of February 2025, SimilarWeb tracking monthly Nucleogenex website visits at just over 1000. This is pretty dead for an MLM company.
If the reasoning for Rockit Gig is indeed “but Nucleogenex is dead, we need this!”, then it might be time to accept the business has failed. Overcomplicating what is essentially still Nucleogenex with umpteen recoats of paint isn’t going to save the company.
Moving on to Rockit Gig’s compensation plan; the primary concern is pay to play. the distinction between retail customers and free affiliate membership if you purchase a product is historically weak.
It lends itself to everyone being an affiliate (“It’s free! Why wouldn’t you?”), and the MLM opportunity being part of the product marketing.
MLM companies full of affiliate promoters over retail customers is your typical MLM pyramid scheme. And unfortunately this has been a recurring theme with Robert Oblon’s MLM launches over the years.
One final note pertains to Curbix. Curbix is a recent launch, its website only having been registered on December 11th, 2024.
Of potential concern is Curbix being an existing registered trademark of German multinational pharmaceutical and biotechnology company giant Bayer.
Things probably aren’t going to end well if Bayer moves to protect is Curbix trademark in the future.
In conclusion; visit Rockit Gig’s website and try to make sense of the MLM company solely based on the information presented on the website. This means ignoring any off-site marketing or explanations from other sources.
If you can’t make sense of Rockit Gig off its presented website information alone, avoid.