DANNY : DE HEKIf you’ve been lured by Rav Malik’s hyped-up promises of metabolic miracles through Unicity’s Feel Great System, it’s time to stop and ask some hard questions.

Behind the flashy Zoom calls, carefully filtered Instagram posts, and too-good-to-be-true wellness claims lies a classic MLM trap loaded with manipulative tactics, unsubstantiated health claims, and angry customers demanding their money back.

MLM Disguised as Wellness

Rav Malik markets himself as a lifestyle guru, claiming to help people achieve financial freedom through Unicity products like Unimate and Balance. But let’s call it what it is: a multilevel marketing scheme disguised as a health revolution. Malik doesn’t make his money selling health — he profits by recruiting new buyers who are trained to become sellers themselves. Every “transformation” story is part of a sales funnel.

He pushes a product that’s essentially overpriced tea and fiber powder, telling his followers they can eat the food they love, skip dieting, and still dramatically improve their bloodwork — all with a “90-day A1C and cholesterol guarantee.” Let that sink in: he’s guaranteeing medical results with no clinical evidence and no doctor oversight. That’s more than misleading — it’s dangerous.

Gaslighting in Zoom Calls

Malik’s Zoom meetings follow a pattern. He kicks out anyone who asks uncomfortable questions. He preys on those desperate for solutions with feel-good storytelling and vague pseudoscientific language. There’s zero transparency about the fact that he’s earning commissions every time someone signs up or recruits a new “partner.”

Don’t expect your critical comments to last long on his Instagram. Like every good MLM promoter, Rav Malik scrubs negativity to maintain his guru image.

The Voices of Real Victims: Trustpilot Tells the Truth

Unlike Rav Malik’s carefully curated narrative, Trustpilot Reviews for Unicity paint a damning picture:

  • Zaheer Mukhtar (UK): “Waste of money, don’t buy.”
  • Giovanni Silva (Canada): “100% Scam, please don’t believe the B.S.”
  • Duane Chapman (USA): “Products are overpriced health supplements. Dangerous health claims. Ran by greedy, dehumanizing people.”
  • Valerie (USA): Warns about maltodextrin and sucralose, highlighting misleading claims about being diabetic-friendly.
  • Zaid (UK): Never got a refund or product. Account suspended with no support.
  • Chhabra (UK): Says Unicity nearly killed him, ended up in the ICU. Got a legal threat after leaving a bad review.
  • Terri Raisor Hayes (USA): Money-back guarantee is worthless. Company ghosted her.
  • Patrick Whitty (Ireland): Used for 3 months, saw no benefits, lost hundreds of euros.
  • Robert Jones (UK): “SCAM STAY AWAY!” — cancelled subscription after terrible side effects, company denied refund despite tracking info proving return.

And the list goes on — dozens of 1-star reviews from customers around the world exposing overpriced products, broken refund policies, fraudulent guarantees, and emotionally manipulative marketing.

The Historical Dirt: Unicity’s Troubled Origins

In 2013, BehindMLM founder Oz published a scathing exposé titled “Unicity International Review: $125/month autoship“. Credit to Oz for digging deep into the roots of Unicity’s predecessor companies — Rexall Showcase and Enrich International. Here are just a few highlights:

  • RICO complaints, drug laundering links, and regulatory investigations
  • CEO Stewart Hughes was a top earner in Rexall — a company flagged for pyramid behavior
  • Unicity’s compensation structure requires monthly autoship to earn commissions — a hallmark of recruitment-driven MLMs

Regulatory Trouble Abroad: Fined in Vietnam

In 2018, Vietnamese regulators fined Unicity $10,620 for violating MLM laws. The Vietnam Competition Authority found Unicity:

  • Failed to disclose proper sales network info
  • Spent over 40% of revenue on distributor bonuses, a pyramid flag
  • Was grouped with other violators for deceptive conduct and training failures

This wasn’t a one-off. It’s part of a global pattern of unethical behavior.

Guilt by Association: The MLM Repeater Network

Rav Malik is hardly a lone actor. Many of his fellow Unicity promoters and executives have long histories hopping from one shady MLM to the next.

Take Michael Turner, former VP of Unicity (2012–2019). As of 2025, he’s now tied to The Code, a suspected Ponzi scheme and securities fraud exposed by BehindMLM. Turner’s MLM resume spans MannaTech, Agel, Jeunesse, and Nutrition for Life.

These are not isolated names — this is a web of serial MLM schemers. Rav Malik is simply the next friendly face they use to suck people in.

False Claims That Border On Fraud

Unicity and Rav Malik make bold promises:

  • “Improves A1C, cholesterol, energy, gut health, immune function”
  • “Suppresses appetite and enhances mood”

But none of these claims are supported by FDA-approved clinical studies. These are medical claims made by marketers, not doctors.

And when customers push for refunds? They face delays, stonewalling, or silence.

Ethical Questions That Demand Answers

Just because Rav Malik has been doing this for years doesn’t mean he’s doing it right. If his products are so transformative, why does he spend his time:

  • Running Zoom pitch meetings?
  • Chasing followers on Instagram?
  • Recruiting new “partners” instead of letting the product sell itself?

The answer is simple: the money isn’t in the product — it’s in the pitch.

Final Thoughts

UNICITY and Rav Malik are exploiting health fears and financial desperation to fuel an MLM empire built on half-truths and hope. They lean on shady leadership legacies, empty guarantees, and a cult-like sales culture to keep the illusion alive.

Don’t feel great — feel informed. Share this article. Speak out. Protect others.

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.

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