I spent two weeks testing the platform, digging through user forums, and analyzing its payment structure. Here is everything you need to know. TopG.org presents itself as a “Bitcoin and Crypto Faucet.” For those new to the term: a faucet is a website that rewards users with tiny amounts of cryptocurrency for completing simple tasks.

In theory, that sounds promising. 50,000 Satoshi is roughly depending on Bitcoin’s price. That would be a life-changing amount for users in developing countries.

If a scam means “promises huge earnings but delivers peanuts” — then yes, it’s scam-adjacent. The marketing is misleading.

In reality? After 14 days of consistent use (approximately 2 hours per day), I earned a total of —about $2.50.

At first glance, it looks like a relic of the early 2000s internet—clunky, ad-heavy, and plastered with claims of instant Bitcoin payouts. Yet, millions of users are clicking, watching, and claiming to earn real crypto.