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Is the Remittix ($RTX) Presale a Scam? The Deleted Team Reveal and the Moving Finish Line

The Remittix ($RTX) presale has been running for over eighteen months and claims more than $30 million raised — yet its team is anonymous, its roadmap milestone promising a team reveal was quietly deleted, its remittance product would require money-transmitter licences it discloses nothing about, and its listing date is structured to arrive only when the raise hits ever-higher targets. User reviews report presale tokens that can't be withdrawn. In our assessment, based on the evidence below, we would not send funds to this presale.

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Scam Watch — reader safety notice. This is independent editorial analysis based on publicly verifiable evidence — never financial advice. Crypto presales are extremely high-risk and largely unprotected in the UK: no FSCS cover, no Financial Ombudsman. Never send funds to a website you have not independently verified. How we verify · Risk disclaimer
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The 20-second version

A finish line that moves when money approaches it isn't a finish line — it's a treadmill. Add the silently deleted team-reveal, no disclosed licences for a business that legally requires them, and withdrawal complaints, and every pillar of our presale checklist fails.

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What Remittix claims

Remittix pitches a 'PayFi' token for crypto-to-fiat remittances — send crypto, recipients get bank money. Promotional coverage as of 1 July 2026 claimed '$30,487,000' raised at $0.14 per token (from $0.0185 at launch in December 2024), with the mechanic spelled out plainly: *'$32 million raised triggers the official listing date announcement, and $36 million raised is the point where RTX goes live on exchanges.'* The sale has already extended itself at least once — 'One More Stage Added' — eighteen-plus months in.

Red flag 1: the listing date is a fundraising target

Read that mechanic again: the token lists when the raise reaches a number the project sets. That inverts how honest fundraising works — a real raise funds a plan; this plan *is* the raise. Every extension, every 'one more stage', every threshold moves the payoff further away while keeping the urgency machine running. It's the endless-presale pattern with the incentive written out in the marketing itself.

Red flag 2: the team reveal that un-happened

The team is anonymous — and it wasn't always going to be. Independent reviewers documented that a roadmap milestone promising to reveal the team was removed without explanation: as one put it, *'a project promising to reveal their team and then walking it back silently months later is suspicious at best.'* A deletion is a decision. Combined with reports of users being banned from community channels for asking questions, the pattern matches our community-hype guide's core tell: doubt gets removed, not answered.

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'Can't withdraw'

Remittix scores 2.2/5 on Trustpilot, with reviewers reporting that tokens bought in the presale can't be withdrawn. Whatever the explanation, a sale where money goes in freely and value can't come out is describing its own risk better than we can.

Red flag 3: a licensed business, with no licences shown

Moving customer money between crypto and bank accounts is regulated almost everywhere — money-transmitter licences in the US, registration regimes in the UK and EU. Reviewers checking for this found that *'Remittix provides no information about licenses or regulatory approvals'*. A remittance product without disclosed licensing isn't early-stage; it's a claim the business model can't yet legally exist as marketed. Coverage reports a beta platform and airdrop registrations exist — but nothing independent confirms working, licensed fiat rails.

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In fairness: what checks out

A beta platform is reported to be live, and the project maintains an active promotional presence with regular product-adjacent announcements. The sale has run eighteen months without an exit event. That is genuinely all we could verify — and none of it addresses the anonymity, the deleted reveal, the licensing gap or the withdrawal complaints.

If you've already bought — and how we checked

Never pay any fee to 'unlock' or withdraw tokens — and treat any 'pay to release your RTX' message as the second act. If you connected a wallet, revoke its approvals. UK-targeted promotions without risk warnings are reportable.

How we checked (4 July 2026): review of the project's promotional coverage including the raise-to-trigger-listing mechanic quoted verbatim; WHOIS (remittix.io registered September 2024); independent critical reviews documenting the deleted team-reveal milestone and licensing search; Trustpilot user reports; a search for disclosed money-transfer licences (none found). This article is independent editorial opinion based on those checks — not financial advice; we hold no position in $RTX. If you represent Remittix and believe anything here is inaccurate, email hello@latestcrypto.co.uk with verifiable evidence and we will review and correct promptly.

Key takeaways

  • The listing date arrives only when the raise hits ever-higher targets — a treadmill, not a timeline
  • A roadmap milestone promising a team reveal was silently deleted; the team stays anonymous
  • Crypto-to-fiat remittance requires licences the project discloses nothing about
  • User reviews (2.2/5) report presale tokens that can't be withdrawn and bans for asking questions
  • All raise figures are self-reported via paid PR — no on-chain confirmation cited anywhere

Frequently asked questions

Is Remittix ($RTX) a confirmed scam?

No authority has ruled it one. What's documented: an anonymous team that deleted its own reveal promise, a listing mechanic that rewards perpetual fundraising, no disclosed licensing for a regulated business model, and withdrawal complaints. On that evidence it fails our checklist, and we would not send funds to it.

It's raised $30 million — surely that means it's real?

The figure is self-reported through promotional channels; we found no on-chain confirmation cited in any coverage. And a large raise makes the questions sharper, not softer: the more collected, the less excuse for anonymity and missing licences.

What would change this assessment?

A named, verifiable team; disclosed money-transmission licensing in named jurisdictions; a fixed, honoured listing date; and withdrawable balances. We'd update this page — the correction route is above.

LC

The Latest Crypto Team

Independent crypto education · free for all

We built LatestCrypto because we were fed up with the scams, shilling and terrible advice that fill the crypto internet. Everything here is free, honest and made with love — no hype, no “trust me bro”, and we’ll never tell you what to buy. Spotted something we got wrong? Tell us, and we’ll fix it.

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