Product Description

Is it $500 a Pop Scam or Legit?

Ever seen a product that promises you $500 “per pop”…
with AI doing all the work…
and no website needed?

Introducing 500 A Pop – another WarriorPlus launch using the same formula:

✅ Big income screenshots
❌ Zero proof of a working business


🚩 Red Flags

Red Flag Why it matters
Fake-looking PayPal proof Can be generated with Canva, easily misused
“No skills required” Violates FTC advertising guidelines
Hidden upsells True cost often >$300+
Income claims without evidence FTC violation
Disclaimers contradict sales claims They admit results are not typical

Even the income disclaimer states:

“may not produce the same results (or any results) for you”

➡️ Translation: results shown are unlikely real.

Other Flags:

Domain Age: 73 days (2 months)
⚠️ New domain (less than 12 months old)

Pros & Cons

Pros

L

Nothing breaks immediately (…yet)

L

Cheap entry price (before upsells)

Cons

K

Misleading income claims

K

Fake proof screenshots

K

Same pattern as other failed “AI” launches

K

Hidden upsells multiplying the cost

Specifications

🧪 Our Investigation

The sales page shows multiple blurred PayPal notifications claiming “sent you $500.00 USD”,  intentionally vague.

Then it claims:

“How we scaled to consistent $5K–$10K months”

Using:
✅ 2 AI tools
✅ Outreach “angles”
✅ Automated workflow
✅ Recurring income affiliate stack

But no proof that:

  • Any product exists
  • AI tools used are legal or free
  • Customers receive the promised value

🚫 500 A Pop — $500 “Proof” That Proves Nothing

Images show PayPal payments blurred out → meaning any image editor could recreate them.

❌ If payments were real, recipients would not be blurred
❌ No order ID, no transaction source
❌ No product tied to payment — just “$500.00 USD Sent”

✅ FTC: Financial claims require verifiable evidence

Product Image
Fake payment proof

 

🎥 Independent Testing Results

@KenFurukawa:

“Classic WarriorPlus app designed to take your money — the app doesn’t work”
(Cite w/ link or “via YouTube independent review”)

2 other affiliates:

“Demo works only with external API key (not included)”
“Upsells exceed $297 for ‘real’ features”

Their bonuses?
🚩 $997 “free value” if you buy through them
🚩 Meaning: they get paid if you lose money✅ Behavior Risk Spike

🔍 References

  • Product launch page (viewed: Oct 2025)
  • FTC guidelines on deceptive earnings claims
  • See: similar WarriorPlus launches flagged by DF4IT

Independent Review Sources:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yTi0H29Tdr4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xanFLZJ0uXw
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ceBz1kO4tZE
– https://theproductoasis.com/… (affiliate disclosure applies)

🚨 FTC & Legal Warning – What the Law Says

The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) enforces rules against deceptive and unsubstantiated earnings claims, especially in business-opportunity or “get-rich” offers. (Federal Trade Commission)

Key legal requirements broken down:

  • Ads must be truthful, not misleading or unfair, and backed by reliable evidence. (Legal Information Institute)
  • Business-opportunity rules:
    • Vendors must provide a one-page Disclosure Document if they promise earnings from selling a business opportunity. (Federal Trade Commission)
  • Failure to comply can result in enforcement actions and substantial penalties. (Mercatus Center)

In this case (500 A Pop):

  • The claim of “$500 per pop” is explicit.
  • We found no public record of written proof or documentation of earnings for typical users.
  • The disclaimers and proof screenshots are vague or blurred.
  • Under FTC rules, this triggers multiple red flags: unsubstantiated earnings claims, lack of transparency, hidden costs, and high-pressure marketing tactics.

🔑 Why This Matters for You

If you’re considering buying or promoting a program that promises rapid, high earnings:

  • Ask: “What percentage of users actually achieved this result?”
  • Check for evidence of net profits (income after expenses).
  • Confirm if the vendor provides refunds or transparent cost structures.
  • If you notice vague earnings claims or “built for affiliates” messaging, treat it with caution.
Factor Justification
Evidence Fake payment screenshots, illegal earning implication
Corroboration 3+ video reviewers report “not delivering”
Behavior Hype→upsells→no responsibility cycle
Responsiveness Only legal disclaimers, little accountability

 

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