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Dholera Rocket Test Is a Front — Your $1,000 Isn’t Launching Rockets. It’s Paying Someone Else’s ‘Returns’.-Expose scammer
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Dholera Rocket Test Is a Front — Your $1,000 Isn’t Launching Rockets. It’s Paying Someone Else’s ‘Returns’.

Let’s cut the rocket smoke and talk about where your money actually goes when you hand over $1,000 to Dholera Rocket Test.

Yes — that’s the name they’re using. Not a fund. Not a startup. Not even a registered company. Just ‘Dholera Rocket Test.’ And yet, they’re promising 3% daily interest. Let that sink in: 3% per day. Not per year. Not per month. Per day.

Do the math yourself — because this is where the lie cracks open.

If you deposit $1,000 and earn 3% daily, compounded, here’s what happens:

After 10 days: $1,000 × (1.03)10 = $1,344
After 30 days: $1,000 × (1.03)30 = $2,427
After 90 days: $1,000 × (1.03)90 = $14,340

That’s not investing. That’s arithmetic suicide. No real asset — not rockets, not land, not even a garage full of soldering irons — generates 3% daily returns. Not Tesla. Not SpaceX. Not the Indian Space Research Organisation. So how are they paying it?

They’re not.

Your $1,000 doesn’t go to Bavliyari. It doesn’t buy steel or sensors or parachute fabric. It lands in a private crypto wallet — probably on Binance Smart Chain or Tron, untraceable unless you’re Interpol. And the $30 ‘profit’ you see credited to your dashboard after Day 1? That $30 came from the $1,000 deposited by the person who joined 2 hours before you.

This isn’t speculation. This is mechanics. This is how it works:

You deposit → they credit your account with fake ‘earnings’ → you withdraw $30 (or reinvest) → they send it from someone else’s principal → you feel validated → you add another $500 → your friends join → their $2,000 pays your next ‘return’ → and so on.

scam warning

It’s a bucket with a hole — and they’re frantically pouring in new water just to keep the surface level looking steady.

Remember that ‘rocket test’ they’re bragging about? A 4.2-meter, single-stage vehicle that flew 3 km and landed safely with dual parachutes? Cute. But that launch cost maybe $8,000–$15,000 — tops — if they even did it themselves (and not just rented a drone and called it a ‘sounding rocket’). Meanwhile, Dholera Rocket Test has likely collected hundreds of thousands — maybe millions — in deposits. None of that money funded propulsion tests. It funded Telegram admins’ USDT withdrawals. It paid for fake ‘live dashboard’ updates. It bought silence from early investors who got their ‘returns’ — until the tap ran dry.

And when does the tap run dry? When new deposits slow. When people ask for withdrawals. When someone tries to pull out $5,000 and gets an ‘under maintenance’ message that lasts three weeks — then six — then never ends.

This isn’t a failure of due diligence. It’s a failure of basic arithmetic — and basic honesty. They didn’t hide the scam. They wore it like a badge: 3% daily. That number alone should’ve been the red flag screaming, ‘There is no product. There is no revenue. There is only you — and the person behind you.’

Which brings us to Warren Buffett’s line — the one every investor should tattoo on their forearm:
‘If you’ve been in the game 30 minutes and you don’t know who the patsy is, you’re the patsy.’

You weren’t the patsy when you read the headline. You’re the patsy when you click ‘Deposit’ and type in your wallet address. Because at that moment — you’re not funding innovation. You’re funding the exit strategy of people who already know exactly when they’ll vanish.

Dholera Rocket Test isn’t launching rockets.
It’s launching a theft protocol disguised as patriotism, tech hype, and Gujarat pride.
And your principal? It’s not invested.
It’s recycled. Then erased.

So ask yourself — before you send one more dollar: What real-world thing — what contract, what balance sheet, what audited revenue — proves your money is doing anything other than lining someone else’s escape route?

If you can’t name it — you already know the answer.

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