The Victory With Ash website has now gone through a strange two-stage comeback: first returning from a five-day outage with absolutely no changes, and then — days later — quietly rolling out a visual refresh with new colors and updated design elements. What hasn’t changed is the silence from Ash Mufareh, who still hasn’t acknowledged the outage, the return, or the redesign.

The website is shifting. The leadership communication isn’t.

Website Down, No Explanation

When the Website Went Offline, there was no notice, no explanation, and no acknowledgement from anyone associated with the project. Even the top leaders in the cult stayed silent.

Members were left to speculate about whether the downtime meant updates were coming, whether the project was shifting direction, or whether it was simply another sign of instability. Because there was no official communication, the outage became part of a familiar pattern: sudden changes, no transparency, and no leadership presence to clarify what’s happening.

The lack of even a basic maintenance message is unusual for any organization, especially one that claims to be building a global movement.

Even after the site returned, there was no acknowledgement of the downtime. Not from the website itself and not from Ash Mufareh. For a platform that markets itself as a “principled, invitation-only community,” the silence was striking.

The Website Returns Exactly as It Was

When the site went back online, the most notable detail was how completely unchanged it was. Every page, every line of text, every section was identical to the version that existed before the outage.

Key areas that remained untouched:

  • The same homepage slogans about “rising, resetting, and refocusing.”
  • The same “exclusive, invitation-only” framing.
  • The same vague promises of personal and business transformation.
  • The same inactive or placeholder sections that contain no real content.
  • The same lack of updates, announcements, or new materials.

The site didn’t return improved. It returned frozen.

For several days, the restored site looked like a carbon copy of the old one. If anything had been happening behind the scenes, there was no visible sign of it. The entire platform appeared frozen, and the lack of communication only amplified that impression.

A Quiet Redesign After Days of Stillness

Only after the site had been back for a few days did something finally change: the design. The homepage now features updated colors, refreshed visuals, and a more polished layout. The typography, spacing, and overall presentation have been modernized, giving the site a cleaner and more cohesive look. There is still no scroll bar so I would argue it’s not user-friendly.

These updates confirm that someone (an alleged “tech team” maybe?) is still working on the platform but the timing raises questions:

  • Why did the redesign come after the site returned unchanged?
  • Why wasn’t the update rolled out during the five-day outage?
  • Why is there still no communication explaining any of this?
  • When will they get a scroll bar?

The new colors and layout show activity, but without context or leadership messaging, the redesign feels more cosmetic than directional.

Ash Mufareh’s Silence Remains the Constant

While the outage itself was brief, and the website has now gone through two phases, the silence surrounding it is part of a much longer pattern. Ash has not publicly addressed anyone since October 21, 2025. This means Ash has not addressed:

  • The website going down
  • The website coming back
  • The new design changes
  • The lack of updates
  • The direction of the project
  • The status of the community he once spoke to regularly

This isn’t about inventing a disappearance — it’s about acknowledging the reality: he has not publicly commented on any of this, even though Victory With Ash still carries his name and image.

For a personality-driven venture, that absence matters. The website returning without any communication from Ash only highlights how disconnected the branding is from the leadership behind it. So although the project still carries his name, the person behind it remains absent from the conversation.

The website is being updated. The leadership is not.

The Website Is Changing, That’s Not the Same as Progress

The Victory With Ash website coming back online doesn’t signal momentum. It doesn’t signal growth. And it certainly doesn’t signal leadership.

It simply means the domain is live again.

The new colors and design tweaks show that someone is still touching the site, but they don’t answer the bigger questions about the project’s purpose, direction, or leadership.

A website can be updated without a movement being alive. A platform can change without a leader returning. A redesign can happen without a roadmap.

The real question — the one we’re asking — is the one the website cannot answer:

The site has returned. But will Ash Mufareh?

Right now, the silence speaks louder than the homepage ever could.

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.