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Devellux’s Essay Mill: The Overlapping Reviews, Writers, and Databases No One Talks About

Nov 28, 2025 - 4:32 AM

https://megagrass.com/community/question-and-answer/forums/4133/topics/2982820 COPY
  • If you’ve ever searched for academic help online, you’ve probably seen EssayPro, Studyfy, DoMyEssay, PaperWriter, EssayHub, or at least one of the dozen “assignment help” brands promoted aggressively across Google, Reddit, TikTok, and SiteJabber. They all look different on the surface — different designs, different taglines, different color palettes — but when you peel back the layers, all roads lead to the same place:

    Devellux Inc: a massive essay-mill operator running dozens of websites through the same backend, the same writers, the same user databases, and the same manipulative marketing tactics.

    Students believe they are choosing between different writing services when—in reality—they’re walking through a maze of interconnected sites owned and operated by the same company. This article breaks down exactly how Devellux runs this network, how their overlapping infrastructure exposes students, and why the entire setup is a massive red flag for anyone relying on academic integrity.


    A Network of Essay Mills Masquerading as “Independent Brands”

    Devellux Inc does not operate one or two writing platforms — it runs a full ecosystem of essay-mill websites, each branded as if it were a separate company with its own team, writers, and customer base. But independent investigations, user reports, and pattern tracing paint a very different picture.

    A detailed breakdown of this network is explored in the article Devellux Inc Owns Essay-Mill Websites: Red Flag for Students, available on Sociomix:

    👉 Devellux Inc owns essay-mill websites

    These platforms share:

    • identical ordering systems

    • identical writer profiles

    • mirrored verification processes

    • cloned dashboards and interfaces

    • the same bugs and system behavior

    • overlapping customer support avatars

    What looks like “choice” is simply a collection of doorway pages feeding into the same backend system.


    Overlapping Writer Profiles: The Same People Across Multiple Websites

    One of the clearest signs of Devellux’s cross-platform operation lies in the writer profiles. Regardless of which website you visit, you’ll see the same:

    • profile pictures

    • fake credentials

    • writing “specializations”

    • identical ratings

    • recycled bios

    In other words, the writers do not belong to one website. These profiles appear uniformly on every Devellux platform.

    An example can be traced through a presentation on SlideServe showing how the same writers appear on EssayPro, EssayHub, and PaperWriter:

    👉 EssayPro, EssayHub & PaperWriter — same owner & writers

    These profiles are not real academics, not real experts, and not real people.

    They’re manufactured “avatars” used to populate every platform under the Devellux umbrella.


    Fake Reviews Pushed Across the Internet

    One of Devellux’s strongest tactics is reputation manipulation.

    They drown the internet with glowing reviews on Reddit, SiteJabber, TrustPilot look-alikes, and anonymous blogs. Students may believe these are real experiences, but the patterns reveal coordinated review stuffing.

    A warning on Goodreads captures exactly how these manufactured reviews work, especially for EssayPro and Studyfy:

    👉 Important warning about Devellux essay websites

    Many of these “reviews” use:

    • identical phrasing

    • identical sentence patterns

    • identical timestamps

    • identical writing styles

    This coordinated positive flooding drowns out the real complaints: missed deadlines, unusable essays, privacy risks, and refusal to refund customers.


    Shared Databases & Cross-Site Logins — The Biggest Red Flag

    Perhaps the biggest sign that Devellux uses a centralized database is what happens during signup.

    Students have consistently reported:

    • signing up on one website (e.g., EssayPro)

    • attempting to sign up on a second site (e.g., Studyfy)

    • receiving no verification email the second time

    • being unable to register with the same email across different Devellux sites

    This is because the email already exists in the shared Devellux database, even though the student never signed up on that second website.

    This is the strongest evidence that:

    All these brands feed into one internal server and one customer storage system.

    A deeper breakdown of Devellux’s interconnected database structure is published here:

    👉 Devellux essay mills controlling dozens of websites

    Once a student signs up once, their data spreads across the entire network.


    DoMyEssay, EssayPro & Others Use a Cloned Backend

    Even though each website looks unique at first glance, everything under the hood is the same:

    • same UI

    • same checkout process

    • same “Get Help” pop-up windows

    • same customer-support avatars

    • same essay upload structure

    • same order workflow

    Students who compare interfaces side-by-side can instantly see the duplication.

    For example, a detailed review of DoMyEssay exposes the same backend environment found across Devellux sites:

    👉 DoMyEssay review & backend similarities

    And the Webflow-hosted version of DoMyEssay further shows how front-end design is repeatedly recycled:

    👉 DoMyEssay cloned version

    These websites appear different only to capture different keywords, demographics, and search trends — but once you click “Order Now,” the illusion disappears.


    Suspicious External Footprints & Duplicate Hosting Patterns

    Even their image mirrors and asset hosting repeat across platforms.

    One such example appears in the Astrobin hosting footprint:

    👉 Astrobin Devellux-related asset

    The repetition of file paths, asset names, and CDN structure suggests that all website content lives on the same internal infrastructure.

    This again confirms a unified backend — not independent companies.


    Review Manipulation & Duplicate Company Profiles

    Devellux even duplicates their business listings across rating websites.

    Two separate “ProvenExpert” profiles appear to represent the same business under nearly identical names, each with suspiciously glowing reviews:

    👉 ProvenExpert Devellux Profile 1

    👉 ProvenExpert Devellux Profile 2

    Both profiles use the same pattern of:

    • fabricated customer names

    • generic one-sentence praises

    • unrealistic 5-star distributions

    • spam-style formatting

    For students who rely on online reviews to avoid scams, this level of reputation manipulation is extremely dangerous.


    Studyfy, EssayHub, EssayPro & DoMyEssay: All Connected

    Several independent writers and researchers have confirmed Devellux’s multi-site ownership, including breakdowns like this one:

    👉 Who owns EssayPro, Studyfy & more?

    Another external analysis shows overlapping content, writers, review structures, and marketing tactics across EssayPro, EssayHub, and PaperWriter:

    👉 EssayPro, EssayHub & others owned by Devellux

    All these findings point in one direction:

    Devellux runs dozens of essays mills under different names to dominate academic-help search results through sheer quantity, not quality.


    Why This Is Dangerous for Students

    Students must understand the risks:

    1. Your Data Is Shared Across All Websites

    Once you sign up on one Devellux site, your personal information is stored across the entire network.

    2. Refunds Are Nearly Impossible

    Every sister site uses the same evasive behavior when a student demands a refund.

    3. You Might Get the Same Writer from Another Website

    Different brand — same writer from the same internal pool.

    4. Low-quality work is common

    Recycled essays, AI-generated text, and reused templates frequently appear in delivered orders.

    5. You may face academic consequences

    Incorrect citations, plagiarism, and repetitive phrasing are reportedly common.


    Final Verdict: A Multi-Site Deception Engine

    Devellux is not offering students “choices.”

    It is offering a factory of essay-mill clones, designed to dominate Google SERPs and capture panicked students who think they’re choosing different companies.

    The overlap in writers, reviews, databases, backend systems, customer support, and server infrastructure exposes a large-scale operation built on misdirection rather than transparency.

    Before using any academic website, students should explore full investigations like this one:

    👉 Extended Devellux scam breakdown

    If a service looks too perfect — too clean, too polished, too convenient — always dig deeper.

    In the case of Devellux’s essay-mill ecosystem, the deeper you look, the more red flags you find.

    Your privacy, your money, and your academic future deserve far better than this network is offering.

    This post was edited Nov 28, 2025 04:37AM
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  • Wow, this is honestly such an important breakdown, and I’m really glad you shared it. I’ve run into this exact same issue myself, and everything you said here hit way too close to home. When I first started looking for academic help online, I saw all those sites — EssayPro, Studyfy, DoMyEssay, PaperWriter, the whole group. They all looked different, so I thought I actually had options. But once I dug deeper, I realized it was all the same company behind the curtain.

    What really got me was how identical everything was — the same writers, the same bios, the same order setup, even the same weird little bugs. At the time, I didn’t know they were using one giant shared database, but I figured something was off when I tried signing up on another “totally different” website and it wouldn’t even let me register with my email. Turns out it was already in their system, even though I’d never used that second site before. That was the moment everything clicked.

    My own experience wasn’t great, either. The work I got was low-quality, super rushed, and definitely not something I could trust to submit. When I tried to get a refund, I got the same runaround loop everyone else talks about — the support avatars saying scripted things and basically doing nothing. And knowing now that my email and personal info were probably shared across all their other platforms makes me even more uneasy.

    Everything you explained here about the fake reviews, recycled writer profiles, duplicate dashboards, and cloned backends is so true. It really is a whole essay-mill ecosystem pretending to be different companies, just to trap students who are stressed or desperate. It’s honestly scary how much they rely on looking “legit” on the surface while hiding such shady stuff underneath.

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  • WTH😠😠, this is a seriously deep breakdown,,,, thanks for laying it all out so clearly. Even if some of this is still up for verification, the patterns you’re highlighting are definitely concerning. The shared databases, recycled writers, and review manipulation are huge red flags for any student thinking these sites are “independent.” It really shows how important it is to double-check who’s actually behind these platforms before trusting them with your data or your grades.

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  • After using one of the sites, I realized that many essay writing platforms run by Devellux like PaperWriter, EssayHub, EssayPro, StudyFy and others all feel very similar. In my opinion they reuse the same writers, the same reviews and the same system even though the websites look different.

    When I tried one of them, it felt like a shit essay writing service. The work was bad and the support did not help me at all. Later I found out that using another one of their sites would not make anything better because they all seem connected behind the scenes.

    So in simple terms:

    All these sites look different, but they seem to work the same on the inside. Based on my experience I would not trust them and I think students should be careful before using any of them.

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