When I joined a Zoom meeting run by a company calling itself Robotech Education Institute Pvt. Ltd., I wasn’t expecting to witness such a textbook playbook of deception unfold in real-time.
With over 180 people in attendance, mostly from India, the presentation was slick, overly confident, and riddled with dangerous promises. And as I sat through it—firing off screen takeover requests and cycling through seven open browser windows to deliberately interrupt the session—I knew I had to dive deeper.
What I found was a carefully designed funnel, dressed in the language of empowerment and education, but functioning as a crypto-flavored multilevel marketing scheme. This blog is a comprehensive breakdown of RobotechCrypto.com and the people behind it, and it’s something every would-be investor or educator needs to read.
The Bait: Education With No Substance
Robotech claims to be an educational institute offering in-depth cryptocurrency trading courses. Their tagline? “Crypto Education Simplified.” But try to enroll in a course and you’re met with dead ends—non-functional buttons, no curriculum, and certainly no proof of qualified instructors. Instead, everything leads to one thing: getting you into Royal Q.
Royal Q is an AI trading bot they claim can trade 24/7 and guarantee profit using “dollar cost averaging” and “circle mode.” If that sounds like MLM lingo wrapped in crypto buzzwords—it is.
During the Zoom, a presenter named Mr. Sivakumar—introduced as a “wealth coach” and “one of the directors”—laid it all out:
“This bot trades 24/7 and only gives profit. It’s 100% secure. No losses. Even with market dips, our strategy always wins.”
This kind of language is textbook Ponzi rhetoric—absolute returns, zero risk, and bold financial claims without audit trails or regulation.
Red Flags From the Zoom Meeting
The transcript, translated from Tamil, reveals a pattern of high-pressure tactics and misleading claims. Here are just a few:
- “No loss strategy”: Promoters repeatedly claim the bot has never lost money. That’s mathematically impossible in real trading.
- Unrealistic profits: They push scenarios like turning a $52 trade into “1 crore rupees” (~USD $120,000) using Royal Q’s compounding strategies.
- Artificial urgency: “Activate today before 6 PM or you’ll miss the workshop and your free BTC bonus.”
- Dubious testimonials: Multiple individuals claimed to have made 40 lakh, 49 lakh, and even more from Royal Q trades, conveniently positioning themselves as “Senior Wealth Coaches.”
- Hard push for referrals: The business model relies heavily on bringing in new members, with each “coach” pitching how they grew their income by building downlines.
Royal Q: Ponzi Bot With App Store Approval
Royal Q is available on both the Google Play Store and Apple App Store. It promises:
- Trading in top exchanges like Binance, OKX, BitGet, and more
- “Guaranteed profit” through AI bots
- Zero loss thanks to dollar cost averaging and “circle trading”
- Over 1.8 million users in 200+ countries
The app’s developer, Royal Quantify Investment Management Co., Limited, hides behind generic privacy policies and unverifiable credentials. Its iOS page is littered with suspiciously vague reviews claiming life-changing profits without showing evidence.
If it sounds too good to be true, that’s because it is.
The MLM Engine Underneath It All
Robotech doesn’t sell trading bots directly. Instead, it sells activation packages and fuel charges to “activate” your Royal Q bot:
- $120 yearly activation fee
- $20 fuel charge
- Minimum capital: $52 per trade (but they recommend $182+ for proper functioning)
- Bonus coins and incentives for early sign-up
They also promote:
- Circle Mode: Set it and forget it. One trade signal loops endlessly.
- Solo Trade: Trade manually using signals provided by Robotech.
- Compound Mode: Start small, reinvest profits, and eventually hit “crorepati” (millionaire) status.
None of these come with backtesting, audited results, or transparency. And all rely on user capital sitting in unverified trading systems.
The Evangelists: Unqualified and Overhyped
Zoom attendees were introduced to a series of self-declared “coaches” and “mentors.” These individuals, many with no verified financial background, shared their earnings—supposedly in the tens of lakhs of rupees—to inspire newcomers.
- Sivakumar: Claims to have turned $45 into $10,000 and now runs workshops.
- Krishnamurthy: Supposed engineering topper now earning $3,000 monthly from trading.
- Sajan Kumar: Mechanical engineer turned full-time “Royal Q trader.”
- Prabhakaran: Claims 49 lakh rupees earned via Royal Q since activation.
All of them tie their success to the Royal Q bot and Robotech’s signal group, pushing the idea that you can do it too—if you join now.
The Institutional Facade
Robotech boasts a Chennai head office and claims branches in Tiruppur, Salem, and Madurai. It references ISO certifications, “legal advisors,” and compliance with Indian crypto regulations.
Yet:
- Their app on the Google Play Store is listed as a robotics and automation company, not a trading platform.
- Their website lacks clear information about regulation, financial oversight, or corporate accountability.
- All “course” links are non-functional.
- Telegram signals are effectively unlicensed financial advice.
This is not a registered brokerage or financial advisor.
Company Registration Details
Robotech Education Institute Private Limited is a relatively new company, officially incorporated on June 5, 2024 under the Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA) in India. Its Corporate Identification Number (CIN) is U62099TN2024PTC170845, and its current registration status is active.
These details provide surface-level legitimacy but do not validate their financial practices, educational credentials, or trading promises.
Sources:
- MCA: Company Details
- Trustpilot: RobotechCrypto.com Reviews
Final Words from The Ponzi Avenger
Robotech is an investment trap disguised as an educational institute. It’s slick, coordinated, and dangerously effective in drawing in young professionals across India.
It sells:
- Empty promises of “no loss” investing
- Fake credibility via ISO claims and app store listings
- A recycled MLM trading bot already associated with scams
- A pressure-filled referral system masked as community trading
If you’re here wondering whether to join Robotech or Royal Q—don’t.
I’m Danny de Hek, The Crypto Ponzi Scheme Avenger. I disrupt these meetings, investigate their lies, and publish what they don’t want you to know. If you’ve been approached, recruited, or lost money—reach out.
Together, we can shut down scams like Robotech before they become the next big crypto catastrophe.
Resources & Evidence:
- Robotech Website
- Royal Q iOS App Store Page
- Royal Q Google Play Listing
- Robotech YouTube Channel
- Telegram Signals Group
- LinkedIn Company Page
- Facebook Page
- Ministry of Corporate Affairs (India)
- Trustpilot Reviews
If you’re in India or Sri Lanka and have attended one of these Zoom sessions—beware of the aggressive upselling, fake testimonials, and cult-like claims.
This blog will be updated with further leads and user reports. Stay informed, stay skeptical, and share this with anyone considering “learning to trade” through Robotech.
If that’s all your research can give you regarding royal q then you don’t deserve the name.
All your reviews were fake may be your the scammer your self. Have used royal q for 3 years now no team but using my capital and I have made good money. Royal q never loses or takes your money apart from the fuel charges. Losses are got via exchanges since they are the banks.
Have u even tested its operation because it’s not the only trading bot available on market.
Hi Nickson, thanks for your comment—it’s always great to hear from passionate Royal Q users. Let’s break your points down and apply a little logic, shall we?
Ah, but you see, The Crypto Ponzi Scheme Avenger doesn’t rely on surface-level marketing brochures or testimonials from anonymous profiles. My research comes from dissecting pitch decks, translating Zoom transcripts, cross-referencing app developer data, reading Terms of Service with a magnifying glass, and—just for fun—gatecrashing recruitment webinars to see the scam mechanics unfold in real time. But sure, let’s pretend Royal Q is above scrutiny.
Classic move—when in doubt, flip the script. Call the whistleblower the scammer. I’ve seen this tactic in nearly every MLM Zoom call I’ve exposed. Next you’ll tell me I’m “just jealous” I didn’t buy in at the right time. That dog won’t hunt, my friend. My platform is built on transparency, and unlike Royal Q promoters, I don’t profit from bringing anyone into any program. No referral links. No “teams.” Just truth.
That’s great, Nickson. I truly hope your funds haven’t gone the way of NovaTechFX, Cotps, Intelligence Prime Capital, or any of the other AI bots that were guaranteed to work—until they didn’t. If Royal Q is working for you personally, that’s anecdotal. It doesn’t change the fact that the majority of users are funneled into a classic MLM structure under the illusion of education and automation. And just because you’ve “made money” doesn’t mean the system is legitimate—it may just mean you’re earlier in the cycle.
The phrase “never loses” should be disqualified from any sentence about financial markets. That’s not how trading works. If you’re still parroting that line, you’ve been sold the dream—not the reality. Also, “apart from the fuel charges” sounds like a lovely euphemism for “recurring fees that fund the system regardless of whether you profit.”
This is a creative dodge. Exchanges don’t force trades—bots do. If your bot strategy is poorly designed (and unverified, as Royal Q’s is), then yes, your trades may lose money. Blaming Binance or OKX is like blaming your ATM because you overdrew your account. The logic is adorable, but unfortunately not how causality works.
Yes, and I’ve seen what happens when you connect it to a real account, backtest its logic, and compare its marketing claims to its code execution. Spoiler: it’s underwhelming, non-transparent, and deeply dependent on endless recruitment.
So Nickson, if you’re profiting without referrals, fantastic—I hope you screenshot every transaction before the fuel runs out. But just remember: scammers don’t wear ski masks anymore. They wear suits, host webinars, call themselves “wealth coaches,” and build dreams on spreadsheets with zero audits.
Thanks again for engaging. You’re always welcome here—but bring more facts next time, and maybe leave the Royal Q brochure at home.
Warm regards,
Danny de Hek – The Crypto Ponzi Scheme Avenger