3FO ALPHA AI Exposed: Crypto G Reveals Shavez’s Ponzi Yield, Fake Trading and Circular Money Flow


 

I want to take a moment to introduce you to one of the Avengers I’m most proud to work alongside — Crypto G.

He’s not just another commentator in the crypto space; he’s a forensic investigator who can dive into any blockchain wallet and trace exactly where the money is going.

While promoters spin stories about “AI trading” and “lifetime yields,” Crypto G follows the hard data on-chain. His videos strip away the smoke and mirrors, exposing how these platforms actually operate, and helping thousands of people avoid being financially destroyed.

In his latest video, 3FO ALPHA AI – Backend UPDATE SEPT 2025 – Shavez Your Lord and Savious, he delivers another masterclass in forensic analysis — one that investors and skeptics alike need to see. What follows is a breakdown of his findings.

“One of the most powerful insights from Crypto G’s video is the reminder to watch the corp wallet balance like a countdown timer. When this wallet runs dry, withdrawals stop. Every so-called “yield” you see on dashboards is dependent on fresh deposits. You can watch the balance creep toward zero here: debank.com/profile/0x612528c759dc1f110a5d4c6d325454ad8b93d829/

Why Crypto G Matters

Crypto G is one of our Avengers who can dive into on-chain data and trace where the money actually goes. In this new breakdown, he turns that lens on 3FO and Alpha AI, mapping deposits, payouts, and the missing middle where real trading or staking is supposed to happen. The result is a clear, evidence-driven story: no staking contract, no AI trading, and a circular flow of funds that looks like classic ponzenomics dressed up in tech jargon.

OP Season… And The Bait

OP season is back, and with it a wave of AI-themed, blockchain-flavoured “never-done-before” pitches. The MLM affiliate chorus (the “disciples”) pump out ridiculous returns—“the bank gives 3–4% a year, we’ll give you 78% passively”—while glossing over the basic due-diligence checks that would save their followers from harm. As Crypto G notes, many promoters have simply migrated from one collapsed promise to the next, swapping buzzwords and platforms while the playbook stays the same.

The Hyperverse Family Tree

Crypto G revisits the pre-history: HCash, Molecular Future (MOF), and the Hyper-ecosystem—names and codebases that keep reappearing. He highlights the Lucknow, India tech crew and ties back to Eureka Infosolutions, arguing that key actors have been “along for the ride” since 2018–19. The thread continues through HyperOne, Boomerang, and now 3FO/Alpha AI—a chain of rebrands and relaunches whenever previous claims fail to materialize (e.g., the fantasy bridge/P2P exchange that never arrived).

Dashboard Theatre vs. On-Chain Reality

The latest promise: weekly ETH “yield,” paid every Wednesday for life, credited to your 3FO dashboard. Crypto G’s first red flag: that dashboard credit is Web2, not an on-chain event. In other words, the number you see on screen isn’t blockchain-verifiable. This “yield” can allegedly be withdrawn in ETH to a self-custody wallet or exchange—but where does the ETH actually come from?

How The “Yield” Really Works

Crypto G traces verified leader wallets and the 3FO payout address. What he shows:

  • User deposits (e.g., $500 in ETH) flow into a 3FO corp deposit wallet.

  • That corp wallet funds the 3FO withdrawal wallet.

  • The withdrawal wallet sends ETH to users who “withdraw their yield.”

Missing completely is any staking contract, on-chain trading activity, or liquidity-pool mechanics that would generate real yield. This is circular money flow: new deposits fund withdrawals. It mirrors what we’ve seen before in Hyperfund—right down to the wallet choreography.

Why Offer ETH Now?

Because nobody wants the proxy token “BTCC” anymore. Offering to pay “yield” in real ETH is a momentum ploy to pull in fresh assets. The catch: to “use” trapped BTCC you must add $500 of ETH under the label “staking”—with no Solidity contract in sight. That accelerates depletion of the central corp wallet and shortens runway unless more fresh ETH arrives.

Receipts From The Boomerang Era

Crypto G reminds us how Boomerang unraveled: the “AI trading” was exposed as scripted output, payouts were timed to corp wallet top-ups, and the code even included a single 250k-character line dictating fake trading percentages. Different platform, same pattern: scripted optics, deposit-funded withdrawals, and no verifiable external revenue.

Names, Narratives, And The “I Didn’t Know” Defense

The video calls out serial promoters who plead ignorance once platforms collapse—then reappear pushing the next miracle. Meanwhile, leaders celebrate “lifetime Wednesday yields,” but on-chain the only consistent activity is funds entering the corp wallet from users and exiting to users (and to certain exchanges and leaders). No yield engine. No staking logic. No AI.

The Tax Sting In The Tail

Crypto G flags the tax angle: every token disposal or swap can be a taxable event. If you’ve been cycling tokens to chase dashboards, expect tax authorities to take an interest when allowances reset and reporting tightens. Illusory gains and constant token churn can compound your risk.

The Clock Is Ticking

The corp wallet balance is the tell. If fresh ETH stops and the central pot runs low, withdrawals halt. Crypto G’s bottom line: watch the corp wallet like a hawkwhen it trends to zero, the “yield” ends.

Key Takeaways For Investors

  • If it’s real, it’s on-chain. Dashboards aren’t evidence. Look for contracts, liquidity flows, and verifiable trading.

  • Follow the money. If user deposits fund payouts, that’s not yield—that’s redistribution.

  • Token traps are deliberate. Forcing you to add ETH to mobilize a stranded token is fresh-money engineering.

  • High returns = short lifespan. As liquidity thins, platforms accelerate presentations and pressure deposits.

  • Tax isn’t a footnote. Swaps and disposals can trigger obligations even if your “profit” was dashboard smoke.

Do Your Own Verification

Crypto G encourages viewers to inspect the wallets themselves. The path is straightforward: trace payouts → identify the withdrawal wallet → trace its funding source. If the only source is the corp deposit wallet fed by users, then the “AI/staking” story collapses.

Final Word

This is not about hating crypto. As Crypto G puts it, if you want exposure, buy BTC/ETH/ADA/SOL/AVAX/BNB or other top-cap assets—but don’t park funds in MLM-styled “AI yield” platforms using crypto as payment rails. Fast deposits and frictionless withdrawals are features scammers love; transparent on-chain yield is what real systems show—and that’s exactly what’s missing here.

Crypto G out — and the Avengers rock.

About the Author

Danny de Hek, also known as The Crypto Ponzi Scheme Avenger, is a New Zealand-based investigative journalist specializing in exposing crypto fraud, Ponzi schemes, and MLM scams. His work has been featured by Bloomberg, The New York Times, The Guardian Australia, ABC News Australia, and other international outlets.

Stop losing your future to financial parasites. Subscribe. Expose. Protect.

My work exposing crypto fraud has been featured in:

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Origin LGNS Exposed: Crypto Ponzi Masquerading as DeFi with 3X Daily Profits and Cult Hype

BitNest’s Smart Contract Audit: Why a Clean Code Check Doesn’t Erase a Ponzi Business Model

TOFRO.pro Exposed: The High-Risk Crypto Scam Masquerading as Copy Trading Through MTS Foundation