Back in January BehindMLM reviewed what at the time was Vyb’s prelaunch.

We were unimpressed with what was an obvious pump and dump pyramid scheme.

Following multiple hiccups, Vyb went on to launch with its pyramid scheme model in February 2025.

Vyb’s first launch flopped, prompting co-owner Aundray Russell announced a new May 5th Vyb relaunch date.

Vyb’s relaunch also flopped. This prompted Russell to announce a May 15th Vyb re-relaunch date.

Fast forward to today and Vyb does appear to have re-relaunched on the domain “thevyb.io”.

Danny de Hek wrote in to advise mid-May that Vyb had changed its business model during one of its re-relaunches.

Today we’re visiting Vyb for an updated post-launch review.

The Company

Vyb fails to disclose ownership or executive information on its website.

From our initial prelaunch review however, we know Vyb’s co-owners are Aundray Russell, Megan Lynch and Ragan Lynch.

In pre-launch marketing videos, Megan Lynch cited Russell as Vyb’s CEO. Russell later claimed he wasn’t CEO.

On the corporate side of things, Vyb is run through Vyb Collective LLC. Vyb Collective LLC appears to be a Wyoming shell company.

Vyb’s Products

Vyb markets three membership tiers:

  • Elevate – pay $39.99 a month for access to weekly coaching, “7 class bootcamp”, monthly live training, community chat and a “referral-ready platform”
  • Pro – pay $159.99 a month for access to Elevate plus “brandworks + connect”, Vyb Trybe, Vyb Vault and Vyb Global
  • Legend – pay $249.99 a month for access to Elevate and Pro plus “market insights & AI tools”, creator mode, VIP mentorship and “mastermind access”

A lot of those sound like marketing terms. I’d love to be able to further explain what those marketing terms mean, but Vyb fails to elaborate.

Vyb’s Compensation Plan

Vyb’s compensation plan pays on the sale of memberships to retail customers and recruited promoters.

Note that Vyb’s retail customers might not actually be retail customers. We’ll go over this in the conclusion of this review below.

Vyb Promoter Ranks

There are eight promoter ranks within Vyb’s compensation plan.

Along with their respective qualification criteria, they are as follows:

  1. Apprentice – sign up as a Vyb promoter and generate 40 PV a month
  2. Rookie – generate 160 PV a month
  3. Connector – generate 500 PV a month
  4. Creator – generate 750 PV a month (max 40% from any one recruitment leg)
  5. Promoter – generate 1000 PV a month (max 60% from any one recruitment leg)
  6. Influencer – generate 1250 PV a month (max 50% from any one recruitment leg)
  7. Icon – generate 1500 PV a month (max 40% from any one recruitment leg)
  8. Legend – generate 1750 PV a month (max 40% from any one recruitment leg)

PV stands for “Personal Volume”. PV is generated via the sale of Vyb memberships:

  • sale of an Elevate membership generates 40 PV a month
  • sale of a Pro membership generates 160 PV a month
  • sale of a Legend membership generates 250 PV a month

Referral Commissions

Vyb pays referral commissions on the sale of memberships down two levels of recruitment:

  • level 1 (personally sold memberships) – up to 30%
  • level 2 – up to 15%

Note the “up to” part of Vyb’s referral commissions is not explained.

Legacy Rewards

I’m not 100% sure what Vyb’s “Legacy Rewards” are and it’s not explained in Vyb’s compensation documentation.

think Vyb’s Legacy Rewards are paid on recurring monthly membership payments.

  • L1 (sales you make) – pays $6 on the sale of an Elevate membership, $20 on the sale of a Pro membership and $40 on the sale of a Legend membership
  • L2 (sales your recruited downline makes) – pays $3 on the sale of an Elevate membership, $10 on the sale of a Pro membership and $20 on the sale of a Legend membership

Vyb pays out Legacy rewards using a 3×10 matrix.

A 3×10 matrix places a Vyb promoter at the top of a matrix, with three positions directly under them:

These three positions form the first level of the matrix. The second level of the matrix is generated by splitting these first three positions into another three positions each (9 positions).

Levels three to ten of the matrix are generated in the same manner, with each new level housing three times as many positions as the previous level.

How many matrix levels a Vyb promoter earns Legacy Rewards on is determined by rank:

  • Apprentices and Rookies qualify for L1 Legacy Rewards on level 1 (memberships sold by personal recruits)
  • Connectors qualify for L1 Legacy Rewards on levels 1 to 5
  • Creators qualify for L1 and L2 Legacy Rewards on levels 1 to 6
  • Promoters qualify for L1 and L2 Legacy Rewards on levels 1 to 7
  • Influencers qualify for L1 and L2 Legacy Rewards on levels 1 to 8
  • Icons qualify for L1 and L2 Legacy Rewards on levels 1 to 9
  • Legends qualify for L1 and L2 Legacy Rewards on levels 1 to 10

There’s also undefined Legacy Rewards, paying

  • 75 cents on the sale of an Elevate membership
  • $3 on the sale of a Pro membership and
  • $5 on the sale of a Legend membership

think these might tie into Vyb’s prelaunch pyramid scheme compensation plan but again I’m not sure and Vyb doesn’t explain.

Matching Bonus

Vyb pays a Matching Bonus on earnings down two levels of recruitment:

  • Connectors earn a 100% Matching Bonus on their personally recruited promoters
  • Creators and higher earn a 100% Matching Bonus on level 1 and 50% on level 2 (note these are recruitment levels, not the matrix)

Joining Vyb

Vyb promoter membership is $29.99 and then $9.99 a month.

Vyb Conclusion

Despite re-relaunching, Vyb still feels unfinished. Basic membership product information and compensation details are hidden from consumers.

In fact as I was researching this review, I figured maybe the “get started” button on Vyb’s website under its membership tiers might provide more information.

Instead this happened:

Vyb’s existing promoter login page works, it just appears nobody can sign up.

Scroll up a bit on Vyb’s website and some general information is provided – but nothing specific lining up with Vyb’s memberships (click to enlarge):

This might have to do with this off-site July 20th Vyb marketing slide published by Aundray Russell on social media:

Note that while the above slide from Russell is still vague, I found this on one of his friend’s timelines;

This appears to be what Vyb membership is actually about. Financial advice, from an unknown source provided by an unregistered company (Vyb isn’t registered with the CFTC).

This perhaps isn’t surprising, given Vyb’s co-owners promotion of multiple unregistered trading opportunities (Tradera, XtreamFX, BFX Standard, Automated Wealth Center (“zapz strategy”), Double Vision and Nadex.

In fact as of July 2025, Russell is still promoting shady Dubai deals on social media:

I say shady because Russell fails to publicly disclose what he’s promoting. The secrecy, coupled with Dubai being the MLM crime capital of the world, lends itself to fraud.

Is this being pushed onto Vyb members for a quick buck? Who knows.

On the MLM side of things, Vyb still has the potential to be a pyramid scheme if the majority of memberships are held by promoters.

Even if they aren’t, I’m not 100% sure Vyb’s retail customers are actually retail customers.

A copy of Vyb’s compensation plan material suggests Vyb’s retail customers qualify for single-level commissions:

This would make them affiliates, meaning Vyb has no retail customers. An MLM company without retail customers is a pyramid scheme, meaning we’re potentially back at prelaunch square one.

Pending corporate, compensation and retail customer disclosures, plus one of its owners still promoting shady Dubai deals, Vyb still has too many red flags to be taken seriously as an MLM company.

At a bare minimum we’re looking at violations of the Commodities Exchange Act and FTC Act. On top of everything else, that alone is reason enough to avoid.