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Max Extender, The Website With More Names Than Customers

  • Writer: Srinivas Reddy
    Srinivas Reddy
  • Jun 7
  • 3 min read

Updated: Jun 8

So, let's start from the beginning.

What started as a simple search for a product led me to notice several unusual changes on a website over a short period of time. These observations raised questions about its authenticity and are worth sharing with anyone considering a purchase.



First Impressions


I was looking to buy a noose extender, and I already knew a seller I trusted. Like most people, I opened my browser, searched for the website, and clicked on the result.

My first impression was surprisingly positive. "Wow, they've finally updated their website"

The design looked cleaner, more modern, and much more professional than I remembered. I browsed through the pages, checked the product descriptions, and everything appeared perfectly normal.

At that point, I was already considering placing an order.



The Name Change


A couple of days later, I visited the website again.

Immediately, something felt off.

The website name had changed. My first thought was simple: "Why would a business suddenly change its name?"

As I continued looking through the site, I noticed something even stranger.

The bank account details displayed on the website belonged to brand which everyone knows about, a completely different and legitimate business.

That's when the alarm bells started ringing. The website was originally operating under the name ProExtender. A few days later, it became Penis Extender. And now, it calls itself Max Extender (This is why the title says ,Max Extender, The Website With More Names Than Customers")

(Attached screenshot and video shows the website name changes, along with the bank account details that belong to the legitimate brand which everyone knows about.)


Maxextender name change exposed

The Redirect Game


Here's where it gets even more confusing. Both maxextender.com.in, proextender.com.in and penisextenderindia.com currently redirect visitors to MaxExtender. Think about that for a second. Why is a domain called ProExtender/PenisExtenderIndia redirecting customers to Max Extender?

Why did the website change names multiple times within such a short period? Why would a supposedly established business keep changing its identity and use details of different business?

You can draw your own conclusions.

But to me, this looks like a deliberate attempt to create confusion and make people think they're visiting a trusted website when they're actually landing somewhere entirely different.

Sometimes all it takes is adding a simple ".in" to a domain name to fool unsuspecting buyers.



The Bigger Problem: Authenticity


Let's be clear. The issue isn't selling products.

The issue is authenticity.

The issue is trust.

The issue is plagiarism and duplication.

How can customers trust a business whose entire foundation appears to be copied from somewhere else?

And if you're going to duplicate content, at least make sure you've removed someone else's banking information first. The website appears to have copied material from other sources and, in some places, didn't even bother updating the details properly.

It's the online equivalent of: "You can copy my homework, but at least make it look different."



The Review Mystery


Now comes my favorite part.

When this website first appeared, it was only a few days old(This website was created on 9th April, 2026)

Yet somehow it already had glowing reviews from customers claiming things like:

"I've been using Max Extender for 3-5 months."

Wait. What?

How can someone use a product for 3-5 months when the website itself wasn't even a week old?

That's not customer feedback. That's time travel.

Even funnier, when the website changed names, the reviews remained exactly the same

The only thing that changed was the product name. Miraculously, every review was instantly updated to mention the new brand. Amazing.

(Screenshots attached showing the amazingly funny reviews)


Maxextender Fake reviews

And let's be honest: No genuine customer writes reviews using trademarked brand names repeatedly throughout their feedback. That's simply not how real customers talk, no customer adds ™ in their reviews.



Final Thoughts


At the end of the day, everyone should do their own research and make their own decisions.

I'm simply sharing what I found. A website that changes names multiple times, redirects through different domains, displays banking information that appears inconsistent with its branding, and contains highly questionable reviews raises serious concerns.

That's precisely why I took the time to capture screen recordings throughout the process. Had I relied solely on screenshots, some people would inevitably claim that the images were edited or taken out of context. The recordings show the changes as they happened and allow viewers to draw their own conclusions.


Could there be an innocent explanation?

Maybe.

But these are exactly the kinds of patterns consumers should pay attention to before spending their money online.


For now, my advice is simple:

Stay cautious.

Verify before you buy.

And if a website keeps changing identities every few days, ask yourself why. Stay safe.

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