Fake SuperForex is pinned to our watch chart for a reason. When our cartographers traced the operation, the trail lined up with an official warning record rather than with any verifiable licence.
What our cartographers found
Fake SuperForex uses the same logo and website design as SuperForex, but the domain name is different. The first screenshot is from the Fake SuperForex, the second one is from the SuperForex. Fake SuperForex also claims to be regulated by the Financial Services Commission of Belize (FSC), but the website on FSC is different, either. The truth is that Fake SuperForex is not under valid regulation by any regulators to do forex. Investors' funds in this broker are unsafe and cannot be protected by any law. Fake SuperForex is a scam.
Red flags on the map
- Dashboard balances that cannot be verified on-chain
- Pressure to deposit more in order to unlock earlier deposits
- Appears on an official regulator or fraud-warning list
- No verifiable licence for the jurisdictions it targets
If you have funds with Fake SuperForex
Stop sending money immediately – especially any payment framed as a tax, unlock fee, or verification deposit. Preserve everything: transaction hashes, wallet addresses, receipts, chat logs and emails. The paper trail is what a recovery review runs on.
Cointiverse can chart where the funds moved and give you an honest read on whether a realistic path exists. Start a confidential case review – there is no obligation, and the first assessment is free.
