Supercharger Review: Stolen identity “click a button” Ponzi
Supercharger fails to provide ownership or executive information on its website.
Supercharger’s website domain (“super-charge.cc”), was privately registered on May 19th, 2024.
Of note is Supercharger’s website domain being registered through the Chinese registrar Alibaba (Singapore).
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.
Supercharger’s Products
Supercharger has no retailable products or services.
Affiliates are only able to market Supercharger affiliate membership itself.
Supercharger’s Compensation Plan
Supercharger affiliates invest tether (USDT). This is done on the promise of advertised returns:
- Tesla-LEV1 – invest 4 USDT and receive 2 USDT a day
- Tesla-LEV2 – invest 12 USDT and receive 6 USDT a day
- Tesla-LEV3 – invest 30 USDT and receive 15 USDT a day
- Tesla-LEV4 – invest 90 USDT and receive 60 USDT a day
- Tesla-LEV5 – invest 220 USDT and receive 150 USDT a day
- Tesla-LEV6 – invest 500 USDT and receive 350 USDT a day
- Tesla-LEV7 – invest 1000 USDT and receive 700 USDT a day
- Tesla-LEV8 – invest 2000 USDT and receive 1500 USDT a day
- Tesla-LEV9 – invest 5000 USDT and receive 3500 USDT a day
- Tesla-LEV10 – invest 8000 USDT and receive 6000 USDT a day
- Tesla-LEV11 – invest 12,000 USDT and receive 8000 USDT a day
- Tesla-LEV12 – invest 18,000 USDT and receive 14,000 USDT a day
Supercharger pays referral commissions on invested USDT down three levels of recruitment (unilevel):
- level 1 (personally recruited affiliates) – 13%
- level 2 – 2%
- level 3 – 1%
Joining Supercharger
Supercharger affiliate membership is free.
Full participation in the attached income opportunity requires a minimum 4 USDT investment.
Supercharger Conclusion
Supercharger is yet another “click a button” app Ponzi scheme.
Supercharger misappropriates the name and branding of Tesla, a US-based car manufacturer:
Needless to say the Supercharger has nothing to do with Tesla.
Supercharger’s Ponzi ruse ties into Tesla’s “supercharger” electric vehicle charging stations.
The assigned task in Supercharger is “orders”. This sees Supercharger affiliate investors log in daily to “click a button”.
Clicking the button daily qualifies Supercharger investors to receive advertised daily returns.
Beyond that clicking a button inside Supercharger does nothing. There is no external revenue; all Supercharger does is recycle newly invested funds to pay earlier investors.
Examples of already collapsed “click a button” app Ponzis using the same stolen identity ruse are Car USDT, TVG and JBL Mall.
Including Supercharger, BehindMLM has thus far documented over a hundred “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).
The same group of Chinese scammers are believed to be behind the “click a button” app Ponzi plague.