SuperOne promises the world. A revolutionary trivia gaming app, built on blockchain. A token economy. Celebrity tie-ins. Claims of partnerships with BMW, Princess Cruises, and top-tier athletes.
And of course — huge earning potential for early adopters.
Sounds exciting, right?
Except… none of it is real.
- The app? Still unreleased.
- The token? Worthless.
- The partners? Imaginary.
- The founder? A known scammer with a trail of failed ventures and shell companies behind him.
Now, Andreas Christensen — the man who’s been promising this fantasy since 2013 — has repackaged the entire operation under a new name: Superlabs AS, based in Norway. It’s slick, it’s polished, and on paper, it looks legitimate.
But we’ve seen this movie before.
Superlabs AS is already facing bankruptcy filings, ignoring debt collection notices, and somehow leasing two luxury vehicles while claiming to be building the next gaming empire.
This blog exposes the truth behind the rebrand, the lies, the money trail — and why SuperOne (or whatever they call it next) should be avoided at all costs.
Let’s dive in.
A New Name, But the Same Old Scam
After years of broken promises under SuperOne, Andreas Christensen has quietly shifted operations under a new Norwegian entity: Superlabs AS. On the surface, it looks like an IT consultancy based in Tønsberg, Norway. But dig even slightly deeper and the stink of fraud becomes unbearable.
According to the Norwegian business registry (Brønnøysundregistrene), Superlabs AS:
- Was previously called MYST MEDIA AS
- Is located at Rambergveien 1, 3115 Tønsberg
- Has just 9 employees
- Lists Magnus Aleksander Fahre as its registered contact person
- Uses the domain superlabs.no
- Is 100% owned by Superlabs Limited, which is in turn owned by… you guessed it… Andreas Christensen
The Company That Can’t Pay Its Bills
Let’s talk money. Superlabs AS is not just a rebrand — it’s a debt-ridden, collapsing entity hiding behind a fresh domain. Public records show:
Five Debt Collection Notices
- 19.05.2025 – NOK 813 to Viking Rescue Service AS
- 06.05.2025 – NOK 104 to Riverty Services Norway AS
- 29.04.2025 – NOK 6,703 to The Low Countries Finance Norway NUF
- 08.04.2025 – NOK 813 to Viking Rescue Service AS
- 10.02.2025 – NOK 253 to Riverty Services Norway AS
A company supposedly building a global gaming empire… can’t even pay a few hundred kroner in emergency service bills?
Five Active Bankruptcy Petitions
Filed in Vestfold District Court between February and November 2024, including:
- Claims from employees
- Multiple cases by private individuals
- A corporate claim by Culligan Norge AS
This isn’t a thriving tech company — it’s a house of cards mid-collapse.
Follow the Money: Luxury Cars Registered to the Company
Despite the debt and legal mess, Superlabs AS has been living large. Two high-end vehicles are registered to the company:
Jaguar I-PACE (2019)
- License plate: EV 62222
- Value: ~NOK 500,000 (USD ~$50,000)
- Registered owner: Superlabs AS
- Full Vehicle Details
Land Rover Range Rover (2018)
- License plate: BT 84943
- Value: ~NOK 1,000,000 (USD ~$100,000)
- Registered owner: Superlabs AS
- Full Vehicle Details
So let’s get this straight: they’re dodging small invoices, racking up bankruptcy petitions — but leasing luxury vehicles? Sounds about right for a scam operation in damage control mode.
A Pattern of Deception
Let’s not forget, SuperOne has been “launching” since 2013. Despite a flashy whitepaper, endless hype around NFTs and trivia apps, and claims of partnerships with global brands, the game has never been released. Meanwhile, the SRX token — of which Andreas Christensen holds over 53% — is worth $0.00.
Each time the heat rises, he rebrands. First Mowjow. Then SuperOne. Now Superlabs AS.
The Game That Never Launches — and the Scam That Never Ends
SuperOne promises the world. A revolutionary trivia gaming app, built on blockchain. A token economy. Celebrity tie-ins. Claims of partnerships with BMW, Princess Cruises, and top-tier athletes. And of course — huge earning potential for early adopters.
Sounds exciting, right?
Except… none of it is real.
- The app? Still unreleased.
- The token? Worthless.
- The partners? Imaginary.
- The founder? A known scammer with a trail of failed ventures and shell companies behind him.
Now, Andreas Christensen — the man who’s been promising this fantasy since 2013 — has repackaged the entire operation under a new name: Superlabs AS, based in Norway. It’s slick, it’s polished, and on paper, it looks legitimate.
But we’ve seen this movie before.
Superlabs AS is already facing bankruptcy filings, ignoring debt collection notices, and somehow leasing two luxury vehicles while claiming to be building the next gaming empire.
This blog exposes the truth behind the rebrand, the lies, the money trail — and why SuperOne (or whatever they call it next) should be avoided at all costs.
Let’s dive in.
Tax Trouble, App Fakery & Government Warnings
Behind the flashy updates and endless promises, the paper trail tells a very different story. In 2023, Superlabs AS failed to submit annual accounts on time, violating legal requirements — and triggering a notice of compulsory dissolution by Norwegian authorities in March 2025. The company also failed to process tax withholdings as required under the Tax Payment Act §5-12. If they miss the next tax filing deadline on July 31, 2025, the government will begin levying escalating weekly fines — from NOK 1,314 in week one up to NOK 3,942 by week 19 — personally targeting the board member if unpaid.
Auditor notes show years of dysfunction: failure to audit, lost share capital, and uncertainty around the company’s ability to continue. Yet somehow, they report operating profits — while burying massive debts, high short-term liabilities, and ongoing questions about withheld public funds.
And if you thought SuperOne had no product at all… well, it technically has an App. On Android, it’s had about 50,000 downloads. But that’s where the excitement ends. Dozens of updates with vague “Bug Fixes,” poor reviews, and zero gameplay rollout. Even worse — gambling apps are illegal in Norway unless run by the government (Lotteritilsynet). So if they ever try to monetize it, they’ll likely be violating national law.
Final Thoughts
This is how scammers operate when they run out of rope: they create a new company, register it in a new country, and hope that no one connects the dots. But we did.
And to Andreas Christensen — you may own the tokens, the Range Rover, and the shiny new logo… but you don’t own the truth.
And we’re here to tell it.
About the Author
I’m DANNY DE HEK, a New Zealand–based YouTuber, investigative journalist, and OSINT researcher. I name and shame individuals promoting or marketing fraudulent schemes through my YOUTUBE CHANNEL. Every video I produce exposes the people behind scams, Ponzi schemes, and MLM frauds — holding them accountable in public.
My PODCAST is an extension of that work. It’s distributed across 18 major platforms — including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, YouTube, and iHeartRadio — so when scammers try to hide, my content follows them everywhere. If you prefer listening to my investigations instead of watching, you’ll find them on every major podcast service.
You can BOOK ME for private consultations or SPEAKING ENGAGEMENTS, where I share first-hand experience from years of exposing large-scale fraud and helping victims recover.
“Stop losing your future to financial parasites. Subscribe. Expose. Protect.”
My work exposing crypto fraud has been featured in:
- Bloomberg Documentary (2025): A 20-minute exposé on Ponzi schemes and crypto card fraud
- News.com.au (2025): Profiled as one of the leading scam-busters in Australasia
- OpIndia (2025): Cited for uncovering Pakistani software houses linked to drug trafficking, visa scams, and global financial fraud
- The Press / Stuff.co.nz (2023): Successfully defeated $3.85M gag lawsuit; court ruled it was a vexatious attempt to silence whistleblowing
- The Guardian Australia (2023): National warning on crypto MLMs affecting Aussie families
- ABC News Australia (2023): Investigation into Blockchain Global and its collapse
- The New York Times (2022): A full two-page feature on dismantling HyperVerse and its global network
- Radio New Zealand (2022): “The Kiwi YouTuber Taking Down Crypto Scammers From His Christchurch Home”
- Otago Daily Times (2022): A profile on my investigative work and the impact of crypto fraud in New Zealand


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