Zeus Bounty: members hope to get cryptocurrencies from the in-platform NFT games via a bounty circus in a virtual colosseum.
That is the gist of it, by the way. But far from being the basic all-out crypto investment script in Web3, Zeus’s Bounty invites members to participate in a virtual reality gaming enterprise. In this case, members get to win in-platform crypto (we haven’t seen the preferred token yet).
The owner of this site is Tim Bentley, introduced as the project creator.
Also, the official website shows some serious dives in giving the platform an intrinsic monetary value, besides hopping on the garbage-in and garbage-out Ponzi bandwagon. How much success is on the record currently?
Answering the above question unlocks a different viewpoint to understanding Tim Bentley’s project. It also happens that many credible reviews take to various platforms to discuss the prospects of earning profits from a virtual space.
Do the results portend any vantage to Zeus Bounty in financial terms? The answer is NO. Not one of the reviews, so far, has any positive thing to say about the project. So, do we rely on these as plausible feedback? Of course, it would be a wise decision.
Regardless, the company deserves the benefit of the doubt. So, we invite our readers to go through some of the highlights (about Zeus Bounty) in this article. Read on below for details.
Table of Contents
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Zeus Bounty Review: About the Company
Overview
There isn’t much to go by as info pieces on zeusbounty.com. For the most part, the official brand strategy is to redefine passive income online in terms of a fair system. Here is how the company puts it (on the website) _ appended to Bentley’s profile. (See clip below).
So, you can expect a team of geeks in crypto and an algorithm that probes the best options for investors. Is that a game-changer plan in crypto high yield platforms, though? Of course, the answer is NO.
Many people in DeFi can see through the happy-go-lucky blueprint of a team of programmers/scientists supposedly working on a crypto project. They mostly prove to be fiction, keeping unwitting members in the investment pool on the promise of juicy plums to reap in the end. There are instances of such a promise. For example, OneCoin was an especially high-toned elitist insight in crypto profits. Yet it failed.
In that case, Zeus Bounty needs to provide verifiable detail about its NFT shows instead of merely saying it. Does it do that?
That is where the issue is.
Instead of well-linked, audited attachments, Zeus Bounty thoroughly portrays the typical MLM compensation grid, which is counter-intuitive to every editing a science & algorithm ensemble supposedly did on the company.
So, the company winds down to the same recycled content MLM cliché. The only worthwhile activity is membership plans. See below for details.
Compensation Grids: Unilevels & Passive Profits
The above header shows all the revenue streams for both the company and its members (until it provides a publicly-available proof of NFT gaming). You can join the affiliation cache by buying any of the following membership tiers:
10 BNB, 5 BNB, 1 BNB, 0.5 BNB, and 0.1 BNB.
If you join a higher tier plan, you get a 2.5% retro pay from ten (10) units in both lines.
Subsequently, you earn 2.5% bonuses from a twofold model: Uplines and Downlines. An upline comprises previous investors in the company before you join while downlines are your recruits (or non-personally recruited members coming after you).
10 BNB _ earns you 2.5% from ten (10) units on both uplines and downlines
5 BNB _ earns you 2.5% from nine (9) units on both uplines and downlines
1 BNB _ earns you 2.5% from eight (8) units on both uplines and downlines
0.5 BNB _ earns you 2.5% from six (6) units on both uplines and downlines
0.1% BNB _ earns you 2.5% from five (5) units on both uplines and downlines
The unilevel part works this way.
It starts with an affiliate at the top of a downline lattice. The first level comprises personally-recruited members. Subsequent levels contain recruits from your first-level downlines.
The process continues recursively down to Level 10, paying the following bonuses.
1% on Levels 10 and 9
2% on Levels 7 and 8
3% on Levels 4 and 6
5% on Level 3
10% on Level 2
20% on Level 1
Is the Platform Legit?
The short answer is NO. Zeus Bounty is not legit in any aspect. Here are some highlights.
Claims to offer a solution to crypto Ponzi
Zeus Bounty reverts to the old MLM affiliate grid high yield script after claiming to be a different game from the plethora of crypto scams and NFT tall-tales.
So far, its alleged team of experts is fictitious at best unless details are forthcoming.
Elements of Ponzi
Members can only withdraw less than 50% of their profits, forfeiting half of it by a default compliancy to a charity wallet. Also, part of the members’ profits enters the revenue pool as bonuses on unilevels (and downlines by extension).
But that’s how a Ponzi works.
Heaps the blame on Members, After all
Zeus Bounty attaches a disclaimer on its website, severing itself from affiliate investments it initiated in the first place. Also, note that this comes from a company that supposedly has a fix for crypto scams. But here, Zeus Bounty is employing the same fraud policy as another scam like Tapestri.
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