When a legitimate company’s website goes down, it’s an inconvenience. When a rebranded MLM-style “tech company” with a history of regulatory action goes down without warning, without communication, and without leadership present to explain it, it’s a symptom of collapse. And that’s exactly what we’re watching unfold with Victory With Ash.
The website has been offline for an extended period, with no updates, no maintenance notices, and no acknowledgement from the people who claim to be running this “global platform.” As usual, leadership has vanished and the remaining members are left to invent explanations that make the situation feel less catastrophic than it is.
This isn’t a mystery. It’s a pattern.
A Rebrand Built on Sand
Victory With Ash was marketed as an “educational platform” where Ash Mufareh would personally teach members how to become successful independent contractors in his future business — the so-called Big, Bold, Beautiful Dream. It was framed as the next evolution of the OnPassive ecosystem, a place where the faithful would finally receive the training, mentorship, and insider knowledge they had been promised for years.
In reality, the platform never delivered a single piece of educational content.
Members could log in, but all they found was a bare-bones back office containing short text announcements and recycled motivational messages. No courses. No modules. No training. No curriculum. No videos from Ash. Nothing resembling an educational program. The entire platform functioned as a glorified message board with a login screen — a digital waiting room designed to keep people hopeful while providing nothing of substance.
This is the heart of the problem. Victory With Ash wasn’t an educational platform. It was a placeholder. A stalling tactic. A way to keep the community engaged while Ash avoided accountability, avoided delivering a product, and avoided explaining what the “dream” actually was. The promise of education was never real. It was a narrative device used to buy time and maintain loyalty.
So when the website went down, it didn’t interrupt a functioning system. It exposed the truth: there was never a system to begin with.
Fading Footprints in the Sand
The leadership behind Victory With Ash has become nothing more than footprints disappearing with the tide. The silence from Ash Mufareh isn’t new, but it has never been this absolute. His last appearance was on October 21, in a webinar where he confidently declared that everything would “start up in early 2026” through the Victory With Ash platform. That promise was supposed to be the turning point — the moment the years of delays, excuses, and half-built systems finally gave way to something real.
Instead, that webinar became a timestamp. A marker of the last moment anyone heard from him.
Since then, nothing. No updates. No clarifications. No leadership presence. No acknowledgement of the website outage. Not even a recycled motivational message pushed through the back office. The man who claimed he would personally teach thousands of people has vanished, leaving behind only the echo of his last promise and a login screen that no longer loads.
This is the part of the collapse where the absence becomes louder than the excuses. In legitimate companies, silence is unusual. In collapsing MLM-tech hybrids, silence is the final stage. Leaders don’t step forward to explain what’s happening because there is nothing left to explain. The tide has come in, the sandcastle has dissolved, and the person who built it has already walked away.
What remains is a community staring at the empty shoreline, trying to convince themselves that the disappearing footprints are a sign of progress rather than abandonment.
The Mirage of Progress
When a sandcastle collapses,, the people standing closest to it often convince themselves they’re seeing something else — a shape in the distance, a shimmer on the horizon, anything that feels safer than admitting the structure is gone. That’s exactly what’s happening inside the Victory With Ash and O-Founders circles right now. With the website down, the platform empty, and Ash Mufareh missing since October 21, the community has entered the phase where reality becomes too painful to face, so they replace it with a mirage.
The outage isn’t being treated as a red flag. It’s being framed as a sign of progress. Members are posting that the downtime means upgrades are happening, that Ash is “working behind the scenes,” that the silence is strategic, that the collapse of the platform is actually proof that something big is coming. They’re interpreting the disappearance of infrastructure as evidence of innovation. They’re treating the absence of leadership as a sign of leadership. They’re calling the empty desert a construction site.
This is the psychology of collapse in every MLM-adjacent ecosystem. When the tide washes away the sandcastle, the believers insist the ocean is part of the plan. They can’t accept that the structure was fragile, or that the promises were empty, or that the leader walked away. So they create a mirage — a shimmering illusion of progress that keeps them walking deeper into the desert, long after the water has receded.
The tragedy is that the mirage always evaporates. The website doesn’t come back. The leader doesn’t return. The “big announcement” never arrives. And by the time the illusion fades, the people who believed the longest are the ones standing the furthest from solid ground.
Buried Beneath the Collapse
Once the denial settles, what’s left is the wreckage — the pieces of a structure that was never built to withstand even the smallest wave. Victory With Ash wasn’t taken down by a sudden disaster or an unexpected attack. It collapsed under the weight of its own emptiness. The outage didn’t break the platform; it simply exposed what had been buried beneath the surface all along.
There was no educational system.
No curriculum.
No business model.
No infrastructure.
No leadership.
No plan.
Just a login screen, a handful of recycled messages, and a community trained to wait for a miracle that was never coming.
When the Victory With Ash website finally sputtered out, it didn’t go quietly. It didn’t redirect to a maintenance page, or a schedule-upgrade notice, or even a generic “we’ll be right back.” It collapsed into a 500 Internal Server Error — the digital equivalent of a building caving in on itself. A 500 error isn’t a planned outage. It’s not a controlled shutdown. It’s not a sign of upgrades or improvements. It’s a sign that the system behind the curtain has failed so completely that the server can’t even explain what went wrong.
In the world of web infrastructure, a 500 error is the moment the façade drops. It means the backend is broken. The code is failing. The server can’t process requests. Something fundamental has snapped. And in the context of Victory With Ash — a platform that never had real content, real development, or real technical staff — a 500 error isn’t surprising. It’s inevitable.
This wasn’t a sandcastle being washed away by the tide.
This was the sandcastle collapsing under its own weight.
A legitimate educational platform doesn’t go down with a 500 error then stay silent for 4 days. A legitimate company doesn’t leave its members staring at a broken page with no explanation. A legitimate leader doesn’t vanish for months and leave a catastrophic system failure unaddressed.
But Victory With Ash was never legitimate. It was a placeholder dressed up as a platform, a login screen pretending to be a school, a promise pretending to be a plan. The 500 error didn’t interrupt anything — it exposed everything. There was no development team maintaining the system, no content pipeline, no roadmap and no future.
Just a broken page, a vanished leader, and a community trying to interpret a server failure as a sign of progress.
The 500 error is the most honest thing Ash Mufareh has ever produced.
The Desert of Rebrands That Came Before
Every MLM collapse leaves behind a landscape that looks eerily familiar: abandoned platforms, vanished leaders, broken promises, and a community wandering through the wreckage trying to make sense of what happened. Victory With Ash isn’t an exception to the rule — it’s the latest dune in a long desert of failed rebrands that all follow the same predictable pattern.
When an MLM-adjacent scheme starts to crumble, the first instinct is never to fix the foundation. It’s to rename the castle, repaint the walls, and pretend the tide isn’t rising. O-Founders became OnPassive. OnPassive became Victory With Ash. Each new name was presented as a fresh start, a new chapter, a bold evolution. But every rebrand was built on the same sand: no product, no infrastructure, no revenue model, no transparency, and no leadership willing to stand in front of their own creation.
Rebrands in this world aren’t about growth. They’re about escape.
They’re used to outrun accountability, to reset expectations, to buy time, and to keep the community emotionally invested long after the business model has collapsed. The leader disappears, the platform breaks, the promises get recycled, and the faithful are told that the new name is the one that will finally deliver everything the old name failed to produce.
But the desert doesn’t change just because you rename the dune.
Victory With Ash followed the exact same trajectory as every MLM rebrand before it:
- a grand announcement
- a vague promise of transformation
- a platform with no content
- a leader who slowly fades into the background
- a community told to “trust the process”
- a technical collapse
- a silent disappearance
The 500 error wasn’t a glitch — it was the final confirmation that the rebrand had run out of road. The sandcastle couldn’t be rebuilt because it was never built on anything solid to begin with. And now, Victory With Ash joins the long line of MLM rebrands that dissolved into the desert the moment the tide came in.
The Last Grains Falling Through the Hourglass
Every collapse reaches a moment where there’s nothing left to analyze, nothing left to interpret, and nothing left to wait for. Victory With Ash has reached that point. The website is gone. The platform never existed. The leader vanished months ago. The promises have evaporated. The 500 error stands like a cracked monument to everything that was never built. And the community is left holding the last grains of a dream that slipped through their fingers long before the tide came in.
This wasn’t a sudden disaster. It wasn’t sabotage. It wasn’t a technical hiccup. It was the natural end of a structure made entirely of sand — a rebrand built on illusion, maintained through silence, and held together by hope instead of infrastructure. The collapse didn’t happen overnight; it happened slowly, quietly, predictably, until the final pieces gave way and the truth was impossible to ignore.
What remains now is clarity.
Victory With Ash was never an educational platform.
It was never a business.
It was never a launchpad for independent contractors.
There is no “Big Bold Beautiful Dream.”
It was a placeholder. A stalling tactic. A sandcastle shaped to look like a future that was never coming.
And now that the tide has washed it away, the landscape is finally visible. The people who believed deserve honesty, not excuses. They deserve accountability, not silence. They deserve to understand that the collapse wasn’t their fault — it was the inevitable outcome of a system that was never built to stand.
The hourglass is empty.
The sandcastle is gone.
And the dream dissolves with it.
By Beth Gibbons (Queen of Karma)
Beth Gibbons, known publicly as Queen of Karma, is a whistleblower and anti-MLM advocate who shares her personal experiences of being manipulated and financially harmed by multi-level marketing schemes. She writes and speaks candidly about the emotional and psychological toll these so-called “business opportunities” take on vulnerable individuals, especially women. Beth positions herself as a survivor-turned-activist, exposing MLMs as commercial cults and highlighting the cult-like tactics used to recruit, control, and silence members.
She has contributed blogs and participated in video interviews under the name Queen of Karma, often blending personal storytelling with direct confrontation of scammy business models. Her work aligns closely with scam awareness efforts, and she’s part of a growing community of voices pushing back against MLM exploitation, gaslighting, and financial abuse.

Leave A Comment