Let’s cut the fluff. Windows Store Issue isn’t a tech glitch. It’s a crypto investment scam disguised as a ‘next-gen dating platform with tokenized rewards.’ And it follows the same brutal, predictable math that’s bankrupted thousands — not because it’s clever, but because it’s designed to fail.
Here’s how it works — step by step, dollar by dollar.
Day 1: The Trap is Set
Ten people — maybe you, maybe your cousin who ‘just wants to diversify’ — each wire $1,000 to Windows Store Issue’s wallet. That’s $10,000 total. No servers built. No app live. No SEC filing. Just a slick landing page, a whitepaper copied from a defunct DeFi project, and a Telegram group buzzing with ‘early investor wins.’
Week 1: The First Payout — and the Lie Begins
They credit your dashboard with a 5% ‘profit’ — $50. You screenshot it. You tell your friend. You feel smart. But here’s the truth: that $50 didn’t come from revenue, trading, or yield farming. It came straight from the other $9,950 still sitting in the pool. It’s not profit. It’s redistribution — a taste of your own money, dressed up as return.
Month 1: The Math Turns Violent
Windows Store Issue promises 1% daily returns. Sounds small? Let’s compound it — for real:
$1,000 at 1% daily = $1,000 × (1.01)90 = $2,469.75 after 90 days.
That means every $1,000 invested must generate nearly $1,470 in new cash flow — just to keep the promise alive. But Windows Store Issue has zero income stream. No users paying subscriptions. No ad revenue. No token utility. So where does that $1,470 come from? New victims.
To sustain just one $1,000 account for 90 days, the scheme needs over $1,400 in fresh deposits — per account. Scale that across hundreds? Thousands? It’s not growth. It’s a forced recruitment treadmill — faster and faster until someone trips.

The Collapse: Not If. When.
Recruitment slows. Maybe the referral bonuses dry up. Maybe Google bans their ads. Maybe people start asking why the ‘dating app’ still doesn’t let you match — only deposit.
Then comes the cascade:
→ Withdrawal requests tick up.
→ Support stops replying.
→ The site flashes ‘System Maintenance — Estimated Completion: 72 Hours.’
→ Then ‘Security Audit in Progress.’
→ Then silence.
→ Then the domain expires.
→ Then the wallets drain — not to ‘smart contracts,’ but to a Binance address registered under a fake Estonian LLC.
This isn’t speculation. It’s arithmetic. At 1% daily, the system requires a 3.4% weekly growth in new deposits just to break even on payouts. Miss that — and the shortfall compounds. By Day 60, a single stalled week means a $28,000 hole. By Day 90? Over $100,000 — unless you’ve recruited 100+ new suckers.
And when it all unravels? There’s no customer service. No regulator knocking. No ‘refund process.’ Just a dead URL and a Discord server renamed to ‘Crypto Wisdom Group #237.’
Warren Buffett put it plainly: ‘If you’ve been in the game 30 minutes and you don’t know who the patsy is, you’re the patsy.’ With Windows Store Issue, the patsy isn’t some faceless ‘market.’ It’s the person who joined two weeks ago — the one still waiting for their ‘first payout’ while their $1,000 funds the ‘profits’ of the guy who joined three days earlier.
This isn’t investing. It’s cannibalism — dressed in blockchain jargon and romance-themed UI.
If you’ve sent money to Windows Store Issue: stop sending more. Screenshot everything. Report it to your bank *now* — not tomorrow. And if you’re still thinking, ‘But what if I get in early?’ — ask yourself: who’s funding *your* ‘early win’? Because that answer is always, always, the person behind you.
Expose scammer


















