Let’s cut the fluff. There is no ‘Windows Store Issue’ — that’s just what they call it when you try to withdraw and can’t. The real issue? You handed them $1,000, and not one cent of it touched a blockchain, a trading bot, or even a spreadsheet. It went into a wallet controlled by three guys in unmarked apartments who don’t know what a candlestick chart is — but they *do* know how to run a mathematically doomed loop.
Here’s exactly where your money went:
You deposited $1,000. They logged it. They credited your dashboard with a ‘1% daily return.’ So on Day 1, you saw $10 appear. You smiled. Maybe you reinvested it. Maybe you told your cousin who then sent $500.
That $10 didn’t come from profit. It came from your cousin’s $500 — or someone else’s $2,000 deposit five minutes earlier. That’s not investing. That’s redistribution. That’s theft disguised as yield.
Let’s do the math so there’s no confusion.
If Windows Store Issue promised 1% daily — and claimed it was ‘compounded’ — they’d have you believing your $1,000 becomes $3,778 in 130 days. (That’s $1,000 × 1.01¹³⁰ = $3,778.) Sounds insane? It is. Because at 1% daily, the *annualized* return is over 3,678%. For comparison: Warren Buffett’s lifetime average is ~20%. The S&P 500 averages ~10%. Even leveraged crypto hedge funds rarely sustain >100% annually — and never for long.
So how did they ‘deliver’ that first week of ‘returns’? Not with alpha. With arithmetic sleight-of-hand. Every new deposit funded the ‘payouts’ of people who got in two days earlier. Your principal wasn’t deployed — it was recycled.
And the founders? They skimmed. A 5% ‘platform fee’ on every deposit. Your $1,000 → $50 straight to them. Your cousin’s $500 → another $25. That adds up fast — especially when thousands sign up chasing ‘risk-free gains.’

This isn’t speculation. It’s arithmetic. The model collapses the second inflow slows — because there’s no underlying asset generating cash flow. No revenue. No product. No code on GitHub. Just a frontend that shows fake balances and a backend wallet that shuffles money between victims.
Remember that ‘1% daily’ promise? Let’s stress-test it further. To pay *just one* investor $100 in ‘returns’ per day, they need $10,000 in fresh deposits *every single day* — assuming no withdrawals and zero fees. Miss one day? The illusion cracks. Miss three? The dashboard freezes. ‘Maintenance mode’ appears. Then silence.
That’s why the ‘Windows Store Issue’ platform suddenly stopped processing downloads — not apps, but withdrawals. Because the bucket ran dry. No more water coming in. Just holes everywhere.
Howard Marks once said: ‘The most important thing is to avoid being wrong at the wrong time.’ He wasn’t talking about crypto scams — but he might as well have been. Getting ‘wrong’ here isn’t losing money on a stock. It’s handing over your rent, your emergency fund, your kid’s college savings — and watching it vanish into a black hole that doesn’t even pretend to trade.
This isn’t volatility. This isn’t bad luck. This is design. The ‘issue’ isn’t in the Windows Store. It’s in the business model: no revenue, no assets, no accountability — just a countdown clock disguised as a dashboard.
If you’ve sent money to Windows Store Issue: act now. File a complaint with your bank (chargeback window is narrow). Report it to the FTC and your state AG. And tell everyone you know — not with panic, but with the cold, hard math above.
You didn’t lose money to the market. You were robbed by a spreadsheet and a lie dressed up as tech.
Don’t wait for ‘proof.’ The math *is* the proof. And your $1,000? It’s already gone — not invested, not lost, but taken.
Expose scammer


















