Yet another “institutional broker”, Dragon Dynasty, has burst onto the scene with attractive promises: zero spreads, MT5, 500+ instruments, and a license from the Comoros Islands. It sounds like a trader’s dream, but in reality, it’s a classic trap for beginners. In this review, we’ll break down piece by piece why this is a flat-out scam, and we’ll present rock-solid evidence to back it up.
Brief Overview
- 🖥Official Website: ddynasty138.com
- ✈️Contact Address: Comoros
- 📞Customer Support: –
- 🔐Licensing and Accreditation: MISA
- ⏳Track Record: 2026
- 🧰Specialization: brokerage service
- 🤝Terms of Cooperation: –
- 💰Additional Services: –
Ddynasty138.com Examination
The broker’s official website leaves a negative impression right off the bat. The biggest drawback of Dragon Dynasty is that it’s just a single page. There’s no multi-level website to speak of. The header features four menu items: “About Us”, “Why Us”, “Markets”, and “Platforms”. However, clicking on any of them doesn’t take you to a separate section with detailed information. Instead, the page just scrolls down to the corresponding block. That’s it. The entire “broker” fits onto a single scrolling screen.
A serious broker can’t fit onto one little page. If an outfit really is handling clients’ money, it physically must have dozens of documents publicly available.
Another major drawback is the complete lack of language versions. English only. No Chinese, no Russian, and no Spanish — not even any basic European languages. This is strange for two reasons. First, any genuine international broker always translates its website into a minimum of 10-15 languages — that’s the baseline. Second, the figure “138” in the domain name is a clear nod to an Asian audience (the number reads as “prosperity for a lifetime” in Chinese). And yet there’s no Chinese version of the website. There’s no logic to it.
We open the footer of the site — that’s where a proper broker usually lists phone numbers, an office address, a support email, the company’s legal name, registration number, and license number. What do we see in Dragon Dynasty? None of the above.
The footer contains three links: “Privacy Policy”, “Terms of Service”, and “Cookie Policy”. That’s the privacy policy, the user agreement, and the cookie policy. These are the basic documents that govern the relationship between the broker and the client. What happens when you click? All three links also lead to “#”, meaning nowhere. The documents simply don’t exist.
The footer contains a separate “Risk Warning” block — a risk disclosure. This is a mandatory element for any CFD broker in the world. It should contain text along the lines of “trading CFDs involves a high level of risk, X% of retail clients lose money when trading with this provider”. What does Dragon Dynasty have? The “Risk Warning” heading is there, but the actual text below it is missing. It’s just empty. Either they forgot to fill it in (which speaks to a careless attitude toward their work), or they did it on purpose so as not to flash any figures or wording.
All in all, the list of cons and shortcomings could go on for quite a while. An official website like this is a clear danger signal. If a broker can’t build a quality resource with all the necessary information and guarantees, how can it be trusted?
Company Contacts
There are no contacts at all. There’s no email address or phone number, the kind any trustworthy and legitimate broker has. Dragon Dynasty displays icons for LinkedIn, Twitter, and Facebook. However, there are no real profiles on these social media networks — they’re just icons that lead nowhere.
Key Conditions
The first thing any beginner wants to know is how much money they need to invest in order to start trading. With Dragon Dynasty, this information isn’t listed anywhere. Not on the homepage, not in the “About Us” section, and not in “Why Us”. The specific minimum deposit isn’t disclosed anywhere.
Any normal broker has several types of accounts for different categories of clients. For instance, IC Markets has Standard, Raw Spread cTrader, and Raw Spread MT — three different types with their own spreads and commissions. FxPro has Standard, Raw+, Elite, and Pro. Pepperstone has Standard and Razor. Each type comes with specific terms spelled out: minimum deposit, spread in pips, commission per lot, and the available instruments.
Dragon Dynasty doesn’t have a single description of an account type. Nowhere at all. The website states “RAW Spreads from 0.0” — meaning “raw spreads from zero”. And that’s it. No explanation, no comparison, and no table. A total lack of transparency.
Let’s move on. Any broker has a whole host of small but important conditions, which the subject of our review simply ignores:
- Swaps.
- Deposit and withdrawal fees.
- Inactivity fees.
- Withdrawal request processing times.
- Leverage and margin requirements.
- Demo account.
Exposing Dragon Dynasty
After everything we’ve already dug up — an empty single-page website, no trading conditions, contradictions in the figures, and non-functional social media — the platform already looks suspicious in the extreme. However, a real broker should hold up under scrutiny on three main fronts: the legal entity, the license, and the actual length of time in operation. Now we’ll walk through each one and show just how bad it gets.
We open the ddynasty138.com website and look for at least some kind of legal information. The full name of the company. The registration number. The legal address. The license number. The name of the owner or director. This is the basic set that any broker in the world is required to have. On the Dragon Dynasty website, there’s none of it. None whatsoever.
We ran a search through the database of the Comoros Islands regulator — the Mwali International Services Authority (MISA for short). Such an organization does indeed exist in the registry, dating from February 2026. So formally, the legal entity exists, the license is active, and there’s a link to the website.
MISA is the regulator of the small island of Mohéli, which is part of the Union of the Comoros. In the marketplace of financial regulators, MISA occupies the very bottom — it’s the weakest offshore regulator in the world as of 2026. A license there is issued in 4–6 weeks, with capital requirements running around $50,000 (for comparison, the British FCA requires €730,000, which is 15 times more). There’s no real audit, no compensation fund, and no client protection whatsoever. If a broker with an MISA license steals your money, you can formally file a complaint, but in practice, it’s pointless.
And here’s one more red flag — the lies about the Dragon Dynasty being founded in 2025. The domain of the official website ddynasty138.com was acquired in 2026. The MISA license was also obtained in 2026. How exactly is the broker operating in 2025? That remains a mystery.
What Reviews Do Users Leave?
There are no reviews of Dragon Dynasty online. When you try to find any comments, Google brings up information about a movie of the same name. The name for the scam wasn’t chosen at random — the main goal is to keep traders from being able to find any real negative reviews about the broker.
Conclusions
Dragon Dynasty doesn’t hold up to any scrutiny whatsoever. This is the classic “collect the deposits and vanish” scenario — and the ending of stories like these is always the same. Steer clear of ddynasty138.com and stick with brokers that have a proven reputation and proper regulation.
Pros/Cons
- Not found.
- The official website is a one-page site.
- The claim about when the company started operating is false — in reality, the broker has been in business since 2026, not 2025.
- There are no Dragon Dynasty reviews online.
- Trading conditions and other important details are not disclosed.
- There is no license from reputable regulators.





I don’t know if there are even any traders out there who traded here, but it seems to me that there aren’t. After all, what we have in front of us is a blatant scam. I figured it out right away. One minute on their website was enough for me. A blatant scam with no guarantees whatsoever. They can’t even list the trading conditions. Pfft, that’s a joke. Folks, especially you newcomers, don’t fall for scammers and fakes like dragon dynasty.