Trying Out That “Free Money” Site
So, the other day, I kept seeing this name pop up – money6x dot com. You know how it is, curiosity gets the better of you. The name itself sounds a bit wild, promising free money, six times the money, who knows? Honestly, sounded too good to be true right from the start, but hey, sometimes you just gotta check these things out yourself, right? Just to see what the fuss is about.
I typed it into my browser, half expecting my security software to scream at me. It didn’t, surprisingly. The site loaded up. Pretty basic looking, lots of flashing stuff, big bold text saying stuff like “Easy Cash!” and “Get Paid Today!”. Standard stuff for these kinds of places. It wasn’t asking for my bank details upfront, which I guess was a tiny plus. It wanted me to sign up first.
Okay, fine. I used a burner email address – learned that lesson the hard way a long time ago. Signed up. The dashboard, or whatever you call it, was simple. It showed a balance, currently zero, of course. And then there was a list of things to do to supposedly earn money.

What I Had To Do
It was the usual grind, really:
- Watch videos (mostly ads, felt like).
- Click on links (more ads, some surveys).
- Refer friends (the classic pyramid-ish scheme setup).
I decided to give it a go for maybe half an hour, just clicking around. Watched a few incredibly boring videos. Clicked some links that opened other tabs full of more junk. Filled out the start of a survey that quickly wanted way too much personal info, so I bailed on that fast.
My balance? It went up by pennies. Literally, like fractions of a cent for each task. There was this progress bar showing how close I was to cashing out. The minimum payout was something like $50 or $100, I forget exactly, but looking at the rate I was ‘earning’, I calculated it would take me weeks, maybe months, of constant clicking. No way.
The Catch (There’s Always One)
And here’s the kicker. To speed things up, they really pushed the ‘refer friends’ angle. Get friends to sign up, and you get a bonus. But even that bonus wasn’t huge. Plus, who wants to spam their friends with this kind of stuff? Not me. It felt like the main way to get anywhere near the payout was to trick other people into wasting their time too.
After about 45 minutes of this, seeing the balance creep up slower than a snail, I just closed the tab. It felt like a total time sink. No real money was made, obviously. Just wasted nearly an hour clicking on nonsense and watching ads that probably made the site owner a few cents.
So, yeah. My little experiment with money6x dot com. It’s pretty much what I expected. Lots of promises, flashy buttons, but the reality is just clicking ads for fractions of pennies with a payout threshold that seems designed to be unreachable for most normal people. Definitely not free money. Just free labor for them, maybe. Stick to actual work or hobbies, folks. This stuff’s rarely worth the time. Just another site cluttering up the internet, far as I can tell.