We have reviewed super7.world due to increasing fraud suspicions. The website presents itself as a forex broker offering "accounts tailored to your trading style," multi-currency access, "same-day payment processing," and a "solid brokerage built on years of experience."[1]
However, what can be verified from public, verifiable signals is quite the opposite. The domain super7.world was registered on May 22, 2025, and updated on May 27, 2025.[2] The site itself displays a © 2024 footer while relying on claims of "years of experience"—such a mismatch is often seen in rapidly launched templated operations.[1][2]
Compliance research from TraderKnows has flagged super7.world as "highly suspected of fraud", noting that the platform lacks clear regulatory information, and details about its accounts, trading software, and deposit/withdrawal processes are incomplete.[3] Our own examination of the website's structure, contact information, and repetitive template language suggests that super7.world is highly unlikely to operate like a legitimate, regulated broker.
What super7.world Claims
Claim One: Years of Experience and Stability
super7.world markets itself as a "stable broker" claiming "years of experience" in providing forex services.[1] This assertion contradicts even the most basic verifiable footprints: the domain registration date is May 22, 2025.[2] A new domain doesn't automatically prove misconduct, but narratives of "years of experience" usually require substantiation—such as earlier media coverage, license history, audited disclosures, or independently verifiable company filings. None of these signals are present on the website.[1][3]
Claim Two: Transparent and Fair, No Hidden Terms
The homepage promises "transparent and fair" terms, asserting "what you see is what you get, no hidden terms."[1] However, the site is riddled with generic marketing modules and placeholder-like copy, while critical elements expected of a true broker are either absent or not easily accessible: specific licensed entity names, regulatory bodies and license numbers, risk disclosures, and well-structured legal documents.[1][3]
Transparency isn't just a slogan; it's the ability to verify who operates the platform, under what regulatory regime, with what client fund protection measures, and within what dispute resolution framework. super7.world doesn't make this verification simple or straightforward.[1][3]
Claim Three: Global Partnerships and Scale
The site claims to have "global partners" and presents a grand narrative of scale, including a mobile application with "4.7 Million + Installations".[1] Yet, partners are unnamed, logos appear as generic image placeholders, and the "installations" claim isn't supported by a clear, identifiable official app listing on the page.[1]
Scale claims are significant because they are often used to lower the skepticism of victims. When scale claims can't be independently verified, they should be seen as risk signals, not reassurance.[1][3]
Our Major Findings on super7.world
Finding One: Contradictory Location Signals and Reused Contact Information
super7.world displays an address line, "Chicago 12, Melborne City, Dubai, UAE", that mixes cities and countries in a format unlike normal company addresses.[1] It also lists a Bangladeshi-style number +88 01682648101 and a separate American-style number.[1]
We found the same "Chicago 12, Melborne City, Dubai, UAE" address line and the same +88 01682648101 number on another trading-themed site tradeoptions.io, presented in the same layout style.[4] Another site, infinitytrade.ltd, repeated the same +1 222 56 78 90 and the +88 01682648101 numbers in a similar templated contact block.[5]
Even outside the forex trading domain, the +88 01682648101 number appears on Florizon Petrox Bank (a website presenting itself as a financial institution).[6] This pattern of repeated phone numbers across unrelated "financial" brands reduces credibility and aligns with a template ecosystem rather than a singular verifiable operation.[1][4][5][6]
Finding Two: Copy-Pasted Template Text Includes Another Broker's Name
One of the strongest danger signals is directly embedded in the marketing copy of super7.world: The "Focused on the Client" block contains a line, "At VTrade FX the client comes first," introducing another brand name into the supposed company information of super7.world.[1]
We found the same "VTrade FX" text on crypgrow.live, a site using almost the same page structure and language modules, indicating a reused broker site template deployed under different names.[7] When a site can't maintain its own brand name consistently across core marketing paragraphs, it usually signifies a quick clone rather than a stable, regulated operation.[1][7]
Finding Three: Generic U.S. Phone Numbers Appearing in Other High-Risk Broker Lists
The +1 222-56-78-90 number displayed on super7.world also appears in a listing for "FIDELITY TRADING" on WikiFX, marked in that profile as "unlicensed".[8] Sharing a phone number doesn't prove the same operator, but it's another indication that the number may be a template filler or part of a broader network of similar sites.[1][8]
Finding Four: Unverifiable "Analyst" Signatures and Sparse Content
super7.world features blog posts signed by "Justin Langer", "Mylah Sophia", and "Michael Rhys".[1] The site provides no biographies, professional qualifications, or verifiable licensing status for these individuals.[1] In high-risk broker scams, fictitious "analyst" roles are often used to fabricate authority and provide unaccountable backing for trades, signals, or "account manager" instructions.[10][11]
TraderKnows also notes the platform's lack of transparency, including incomplete information on account types and missing regulatory disclosures.[3]
Confusion with Names: super7.world vs the Real Super7 Brand
Another risk is reputational camouflage. A legitimate company called Super7, established in 2001, is known for pop culture collectibles and is headquartered in San Francisco.[9] This company's public identity is linked to toys and collectibles, not retail forex brokerage services.[9]
Since super7.world uses the same "Super7" naming style while operating in a completely distinct, highly regulated industry (forex brokerage), the domain poses a high risk of attempting to borrow unrelated brand recognition. This is a classic pattern in "clone" or impersonation-related investment scams where criminals exploit name similarity to reduce friction and shorten due diligence.[13][14]
Possible Fraud Schemes Behind super7.world
Based on observable signals—new domain registration, missing regulatory details, reused template blocks, inconsistent contact information, and unverifiable roles—super7.world most closely resembles a common "unregistered broker" pipeline.
In this pipeline, the site primarily serves as a funnel: it captures prospects, pushes account registration, and then transfers communications to phone, instant messaging apps, or email. Once victims deposit funds, the platform might display synthetic profits or "guarantee" narratives of stability, designed to trigger larger deposits.[10][11][12]
A common escalation step is the withdrawal trap. Victims are told withdrawals require additional "verification fees," "taxes," "margin top-ups," "anti-money laundering deposits," or other fabricated costs. The FBI describes crypto investment frauds ("pig butchering") as a confidence-based scam where victims are lured into investing more until they find themselves unable to withdraw.[10][11] The FDIC OIG similarly describes pig butchering as enticing victims to increase their contribution before the fraudsters disappear.[12]
Even though super7.world presents itself as "forex" rather than "crypto," its mechanisms could be identical: falsified account dashboards, emotional or high-pressure guidance, and withdrawal obstruction.
What Typically Happens Once Funds Are Sent by Victims
Once funds leave a victim's account and reach an unregistered or opaque destination, the leverage sharply shifts towards the operators. Victims usually face three practical outcomes.
First is the loss of account control. The platform's internal ledger becomes the sole "proof" of balances, while actual funds may have been moved elsewhere.[10][12]
Second is identity exposure. Registration forms, KYC documents, and chat logs may be reused for further frauds or sold, especially if the operators run multiple clone sites.[11][15]
Third is the second wave of scams: recovery pitches. FINRA warns that recovery scams are a form of advance fee fraud—promising to recover funds for an upfront fee, leading to further losses.[15] The UK's FCA describes "recovery room scams" as fraudsters targeting those already scammed, charging fees for never-materialized help.[16]
This second wave isn't an afterthought; it's an industry pattern. Once a victim is identified as having lost money, the likelihood of being retargeted increases.[15][16]
Important Damage Control While the Scam is Ongoing
When a platform like super7.world is still actively communicating, the most urgent goals are usually to stop further outflows of funds and to prevent additional identity harm. The FBI’s materials on crypto investment frauds highlight that victims are often induced to send more money and may be prevented from withdrawing.[11] In that window, cutting off new transfers and documenting communications can be the difference between controlling loss and a spiraling one.
Meanwhile, scam operators often try to redefine hesitation as "risk management" or "verification." This psychological framework is a core part of confidence-based frauds, where victims are induced to view each objection as a temporary hurdle, not a warning sign.[10][12]
Why Domain Age and "SSL" Aren’t Proofs of Security
Some victims assume a site is safe because it loads correctly or uses HTTPS. This assumption is outdated. Scam networks routinely deploy valid SSL certificates, and even older domains may be repurposed. ScamAdviser explicitly notes that while older websites can be a positive signal, "the age of the website is unfortunately no guarantee," and fraudsters have been found buying existing domains and using them for malicious activities.[17]
In the case of super7.world, the domain isn’t even old—it was registered in 2025.[2] But the broader perspective is important: technical gloss is not evidence of regulatory legitimacy or client fund protection.[17]
Case Analogies Matching the Risk Profile of super7.world
Two well-documented scam categories closely align with our observations around super7.world.
The first is clone company investment scams, where fraudsters mimic or borrow identity cues from legitimate businesses to establish trust. The FCA warns that reports of clone company investment scams have increased, with consumers reporting significant losses as criminals impersonate real investment firms.[13][14] The name confusion—especially when a real brand exists under a similar name—creates a real opening for this strategy.[9][13][14]
The second is pig-butchering style investment frauds, now widely documented by U.S. authorities. The FBI describes it as one of the most prevalent and damaging scam schemes, built on a relationship or trust phase followed by a fake investment platform and withdrawal denials.[10][11] The U.S. Department of Justice has repeatedly described enforcement actions related to pig butchering schemes, including cryptocurrency seizures linked to investment fraud victims.[18]
Even as asset classes change, the logic remains consistent: establish trust, secure deposits, impose withdrawal resistance, and eventually vanish.[10][11][12][18]
Conclusion
In its public footprint, super7.world does not behave like a legitimate, regulated forex broker. Its domain history is short, website copy contains internal brand leaks ("VTrade FX"), its address and contact format resemble templated fillers discovered on other unrelated "financial" websites, and it fails to provide a verifiable clear regulatory identity.[1][2][4][5][7]
TraderKnows has classified super7.world as "highly suspected of fraud", citing the lack of regulatory transparency and incomplete operational disclosures.[3] We consider super7.world a high-risk platform whose structure aligns with common unregistered broker and confidence fraud patterns as described by financial and law enforcement authorities.[10][11][12]
In practice, the most reliable protection standard for this category remains simple: if an operator’s legal entity, regulatory body, and license can’t be independently verified—and if withdrawal conditions are vague or ever-changing—then the risk isn’t theoretical. It’s operational.
References
[2] https://www.whois.com/whois/super7.world
[3] https://www.fbi.gov/how-we-can-help-you/victim-services/national-crimes-and-victim-resources/operation-level-uphttps://www.fdicoig.gov/pig-butchering-scams
[5] https://www.infinitytrade.ltd/contact.asp
[6] https://florizonpetrox.com/contact
[8] https://www.wikifx.com/ja/dealer/2787296580.html
[9] https://super7.com/pages/about-us
[12] https://www.fdicoig.gov/pig-butchering-scams
[13] https://www.fca.org.uk/news/press-releases/fca-scamsmart-warning-clone-firm-investment-scams
[14] https://www.fca.org.uk/consumers/clone-firms-individuals
[15] https://www.finra.org/investors/insights/recovery-scams
[16] https://www.fca.org.uk/consumers/recovery-room-scams
[17] https://www.scamadviser.com/check-website/super7exch.com