Just caught wind of quite the controversy unfolding around Logan Paul and Polymarket. Turns out that viral Super Bowl promotional video where he supposedly placed a million-dollar bet? Yeah, that was completely fabricated. On-chain investigator ZachXBT dug into the receipts and found Paul's account balance sitting at zero when the bet allegedly went down. The guy literally had no funds to back any of it.



What's wild is how brazen this got packaged as legitimate content. Polymarket dropped the video during the game with Paul betting on the Patriots to win, but the whole thing was staged. ZachXBT tracked the actual market holders and confirmed none of them matched anything close to Paul's alleged position. He straight up called it another Logan Paul scam, which honestly tracks given the CryptoZoo disaster where investors lost tens of thousands and the legal battles are still dragging on.

But here's where it gets messier. ZachXBT claims Paul has an undisclosed relationship with Polymarket that nobody's talking about. He pointed to an earlier livestream where Paul promoted the platform in what he described as a deliberately inorganic way. Then you find out Paul joined Anti Fund as a general partner back in December 2025, and surprise surprise, Anti Fund is also an investor in Polymarket's Series B. So when you're asking where to bet on Logan Paul or what his actual involvement is with these platforms, the answer seems to be: unclear and potentially conflicted.

Neither side explicitly labeled the Super Bowl video as an advertisement, which makes the whole thing feel intentionally deceptive. And for context, had Paul actually placed that bet, the Patriots getting demolished 29-13 by Seattle would've wiped him out anyway.

This blew up right as the prediction market industry is already facing serious heat over advertising ethics. DeFi community members are calling out platforms like Kalshi for marketing prediction betting as a money-making tool to people who can barely pay rent. The criticism is sharp: these ads are targeting young people and packaging gambling as legitimate income generation. BetHog's Nigel Eccles didn't mince words, calling it unethical and warning it encourages problematic gambling.

Meanwhile, Polymarket filed a federal lawsuit against Massachusetts, arguing only the CFTC should regulate their products, not state governments. The whole situation feels like the prediction market space is hitting a credibility crisis where influencer partnerships, undisclosed relationships, and aggressive marketing are colliding with legitimate concerns about who's really getting hurt by this stuff.
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