Lucas Lee-Tyson Review

Learn From Lucas

Picture taking a drink every time you saw an ad from Lucas Lee-Tyson or Ozzie Blessed. 

You’d be an end-stage alcoholic, bellied up to the bar next to a gal named Marge who, sure, she smokes a pack a day but she also makes a mean breakfast quiche.

Lucas launched Growth Cave from his college dorm room and became a millionaire by age 24.

He’s got as much credibility as a fortune teller, but I’ll humor him.

Whether you’re searching for reviews of Growth Cave, Digital Freedom System, Learn From Lucas, Ozzie Blessed, Cashflow Consultant, Passive Apps, or Apex Mind, they all point to the same conclusion: a toxic waste dump of an offer.

Keep reading. 

Why Most Courses Suck

“This opportunity is brand new and right now it’s really just myself and a handful of students that even know about it,” Lucas lies.

Swear to God:

If this guy told me the sky was blue, I’m looking up and checking myself.

He continues, “The reason this is so powerful is because right now we are in the middle of a massive wealth shift.”

He adds, “The new automated economy is allowing everyday people to gain back their control and their freedom by streamlining how they produce income for themselves. The money you make today does not require your direct involvement.”

This has all the signs and symptoms of a scam.

For example, fear mongering:

You’re on the verge of losing your job to AI. Retirement is a distant dream. The system has betrayed you. Yada yada yada.

And a rags-to-riches story:

Lucas was down to his last $50 when he chanced upon this miraculous business model. It’s tied to an industry that Forbes predicts will be valued at half a trillion by 2026. And it’s nothing like anything you’ve come across before.

And then, the much-anticipated opportunity turns out to be a total letdown:

Running YouTube ads to sell courses.

Get paid to read scripts for business owners, is how it’s presented on OzzieBlessed.com.

Ozzie Blessed is a former gang member who’s now co-CEO of Growth Cave.

Quite the last name Ozzie has, huh?

He’s all over Instagram bragging about how they’re fleecing their students out of $60 million a year.

He flaunts his mansion and fleet of supercars, all funded by thousands who fell for him and Lucas’s get-rich-quick promises.

Sickening.

“You can create a digital product once that’ll continue to pay you for years and years,” Lucas explains. “With very minimal maintenance and extra time investment.”

Lucas discovered this back when he lived in a cramped bunker littered with pizza boxes, crunchy socks, and a loft bed with a sad little desk underneath.

In a single weekend, he put together his first course – on Facebook ads – and made $15,000 lickety-split.

Realizing the internet was his playground, he went berserk and banked $1 million by year’s end.

Ozzie Pool
Why Most Courses Suck

Lucas has compiled all his knowledge and broken it down into easily digestible steps that anyone can follow. Even you. Even if you’ve never done anything like this before.

He’s included every template, resource, and ninja tactic he’s used to finagle earn millions online.

Now he wants to hand it over to you on a silver platter so you can start making money in as little as 24 hours.

Before, only Lucas’s exclusive, 1-on-1 clients with deep pockets could access this service. But now, even peasants like you and me can get in on the action.

“I decided to make The Digital Freedom System a monthly membership so that it’s more affordable and so we’re motivated to keep getting you results every single month,” Lucas says.

His Learn From Lucas website lists the following payment options:

  • Monthly Membership costs $8.99/month
  • Yearly Membership costs $80.99/year
  • Lifetime Membership costs $97 one time

Another sales page says it’s just a one-time fee of $37.99.

Must be split testing to see which converts better. Anything to separate people from their hard-earned money, huh Lucas?

Refund period? 30 days, no questions asked, Lucas assures us. Though members are coming out of the woodwork claiming Lucas robbed them and refuses to give their money back.

When you go to check out, there’s an upsell: get a special interview series with students making at least six figures… for an extra $37.

Inside, another upsell: Growth Cave coaching for an eye-watering $9,800.

And then another: GrowthBox.ai software, an “all-in-one platform for selling courses and coaching on autopilot,” which costs $147/month.

According to one Reddit user, Growth Box AI is just a white labeled version of the Go High Level software, which, if you purchase straight from their website you can get for only $97/month.

Not surprising, the 1-star Growth Cave reviews are piling up over on Trustpilot.

Sure, there’s lots of 5-star reviews, too, but are they real?

One guy didn’t think so. He said Growth Cave was a scam with fake 5-star reviews.

Another said Lucas tricks you. He says you can make money from others’ YouTube videos. You can’t. You have to make your own and then spam people with ads like Lucas does.

Also, the Zoom call with your “success coach” is just to sell you the $9,800 package, the guy warned.

There’s one active lawsuit against Growth Cave, and probably many more coming.

Verdict?

I’d rather be killed in my sleep and have my guts worn as accessories than buy anything from Lucas Lee-Tyson or his puppet master, Ozzie Blessed.

Ditto Mason McFadden, or anyone associated with Growth Cave, ApexMind.com, or PassiveApps.com.

Why Most Courses Suck