This article will be short, because the MorseGame (and the Cryptollbooth) scam(s) doesn't require any deep analysis to tell, that these are scams with an extreme likelihood:
Both projects use the same awful ICO website template, the SAME team members (none of which is genuine)
For example, the screenshot from the Team section of the MorseGame website:
Alex Vicks uses the picture of a very well-known ICO adviser Vladimir Nikolaev: https://www.linkedin.com/in/icoadv/
John Stanford's picture is a clip art. It also provides a lead, since there are several people actively using pictures from the same set, such as Nicholasio
!
His telegram handler @nicholasios, a small scammer (I've got reports, that he was selling ICOBench expert reviews to ICOs, but wasn't able to deliver anything valuable and didn't refund ICOs) and a promoter working in the team with @genoway (the same telegram handler, https://twitter.com/genowayy ). There are obvious Russian roots of both of those projects. This pair don't deserve a separate article, but they are just one of many teams scamming ICOs for useless PPC campaigns and selling nonexistent services to them. Such as selling ICO Bench ratings, since none of top advisors would actually do it for their prices, since campaigns themselves bring x100 more revenue to anadvisor, than any fake rating on the ICOBench, and those guys have several if not 10s of them. Just from a logical standpoint no one there would risks the reputation for a couple ETH, other then guys with no reputation and no projects under advisory. Check out their BCT thread in Russian, where these two accounts show absolute affiliation:
https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=3305672.msg35289854#msg35289854
And a cherry on the top: the contact email for all team members of MorseGame is alex.binaryoption@gmail.com. You can research it on your own and you'll find out some interesting things. Making it simple, these guys are working in a grey area at best and they specialize in high risk segments.
And this is the CryptoToll. They have exactly the same names of team, but no photos and an extremely poor white paper.
And none of these people can be found or reached for a comment, none of them linked or disclosed any real social media accounts. No business registration data. Copycatted text, meaningless tokenomics, no business plan or financials. Simply nothing in either of those ICOs [campaigns] is good.
It doesn't take any audit or analytical skills to say these two projects are substandard and are very likely scams, but I still believe, that some clarification and this article are required to warn the general public.
Also, I upvote my upvoters and resteemersm when your comments make sense. Do not hesitate to share this article, if you like it.