Can anyone share a real Quantum Ai user review and experience?

I’m thinking about trying Quantum Ai for trading but I’m not sure if it’s legit or just hype. Has anyone here actually used it with real money, and what were your results like over time? I’d really appreciate honest feedback on profits, risks, withdrawals, and any red flags before I decide whether to sign up.

Used Quantum Ai for about 3 months with real money. Short version: I stopped and withdrew everything.

Details:

  1. Signup and funding
    • Aggressive marketing, popups, “limited spots” stuff.
    • Got routed to a random CFD broker, not a known top tier one.
    • Minimum deposit was 250 USD. Support pushed for more on the phone, which was a red flag.

  2. The “AI” part
    • No real proof of quantum anything.
    • Interface looked like a standard auto trading bot.
    • You press auto trade, it opens CFD positions based on short term signals.
    • No transparency on strategy, no risk metrics, no backtest data.

  3. My results
    • Started with 500 USD.
    • First week: up to about 620. Looked great.
    • Next two weeks: swings all over. Balance went down to 410, then back to ~480.
    • By end of month two: sitting at 360.
    • Tried manual tweaks, lower risk. The bot still opened trades way larger than I’d ever open myself.
    • After three months: total balance 327. Withdrew. Withdrawal took about 8 business days.

  4. Issues I saw
    • High leverage on CFDs, so small moves hit your account hard.
    • No position sizing control beyond a simple slider.
    • No clear stop loss logic. Some trades stayed red for days.
    • Support kept pushing “increase deposit so AI works better”, which made no sense.
    • Marketing promised “high accuracy”. My win rate over 3 months was around 48 percent, checked from the trading history export.

  5. What I would do instead
    • If you want algo trading, use a known broker and something like TradingView alerts to a bot or build a simple rules based system.
    • Start with paper trading or very small size.
    • Treat anything with “quantum” in the name and heavy ads as a speculation, not an investment.

So yes, I used it with real money.
No, it did not blow up my account, but it underperformed a simple ETF and took a lot of stress and time.
For me it felt more like a fancy skin on a generic high risk auto trader than a serious tool.

Used it for ~6 weeks last year, also with real money. My take is pretty close to what @boswandelaar wrote, but I’ll add a few different angles.

  1. “Quantum” & “AI” part
    From a technical POV, nothing in the behavior looked like real quant research or quantum computing. Order timing, position sizes, and instruments looked like a very basic high‑frequency-ish CFD scalper with a volatility filter slapped on. No regime switching, no clear risk parity logic, nothing you’d expect from a serious model. Could it use some machine learning under the hood? Maybe. But nothing in the results suggested anything special. It felt like a black box momentum / mean reversion mashup.

  2. My numbers
    • Started with 750
    • After 2 weeks: 810
    • After 4 weeks: 680
    • Final when I stopped around week 6: 645 (before fees and spreads)
    Trades were super frequent, so fees + spread costs were non‑trivial. On a net basis, I’d say I was just kind of churning sideways with a slow bleed. Volatility of returns was way too high for the modest gain/loss. It was like running a leveraged strategy to earn the returns of a sleepy index fund, which made no sense from a risk/return perspective.

  3. Risk behavior
    Where I disagree slightly with @boswandelaar is that I actually liked that it didn’t blow up quickly. It clearly had some internal risk cap, because margin was never fully maxed and I didn’t see instant ruin. But:
    • Position sizing was erratic relative to account equity
    • Correlation between open trades was high, so “diversified” on the screen but not in practice
    • Drawdowns were psychologically nasty, because the bot kept “averaging in” during losing streaks

  4. Legitness vs profitability
    I don’t think it’s an outright “fake site takes your deposit and vanishes” type scam. I was able to deposit and withdraw, like @boswandelaar. Support existed, but was clearly sales‑driven. To me it’s more of a “marketing scam”: oversold tech buzzwords, unrealistic expectations, and a slapped‑together auto trader on a mediocre CFD broker. Legally functional, financially underwhelming.

  5. What I’d actually test instead
    Without repeating the whole “build your own bot” tutorial:
    • If you really want to experiment, treat anything like this as a casino side‑bet with money you can literally watch go to zero without losing sleep.
    • Track your equity curve daily and compare it to just buying a broad ETF or even holding cash over the same period. I did that, and the bot lost to both.
    • If a system cannot survive basic questions like “What is the max historical drawdown?” and “On what market conditions does it fail?” then you’re not investing, you’re basically praying.

TL;DR from my run:
• Not an instant rugpull, but nowhere near the miracle “AI / quantum” tool the ads imply
• Risk/return profile is poor compared to boring alternatives
• Treat the marketing as hype and the product as a high‑risk, opaque CFD bot, nothing more

Used Quantum Ai live for a bit longer than @boswandelaar, with a slightly different setup, so I’ll just layer my take on top.

My experience in a nutshell

  • Broker account linked, minimum deposit funded
  • Let it run mostly unattended on “recommended” settings
  • Timeframe: about 3 months
  • Net result: mild loss, high stress, nothing like the marketing hype

I actually had one stretch of about 10 days where it looked impressive: account was up around 12 percent, smooth-ish equity curve, decent hit rate. After that, it gave most of it back in two ugly weeks of chop. The pattern felt very “CFD grid / scalper” rather than some magical Quantum Ai edge.

Where I slightly disagree with @boswandelaar is on risk. I did see one short, sharp margin spike when correlated instruments all moved together. It did not blow the account, but it came closer to a margin call than I was comfortable with, given that I had zero transparency into the logic behind it.


How “smart” did Quantum Ai feel?

  • Trade entries often clustered around news or volatility spikes
  • No visible adaptation when market conditions changed
  • It occasionally held losers longer than I’d accept manually, clearly averaging in

To me it looked like a fairly generic auto trader wrapped in a heavy “AI / quantum trading” marketing package rather than a serious quantum computing product.


Pros of Quantum Ai

  • Easy to get started for non‑technical users
  • Deposit and withdrawal worked for me
  • Interface is simple and “plug and play”
  • Did not instantly nuke the account, so there is at least some risk throttle

Cons of Quantum Ai

  • Black box: no clear strategy description, rules, or backtest transparency
  • Risk/return not attractive compared to just buying an index or holding cash
  • High trade frequency makes spreads and fees quietly eat into any edge
  • Psychological stress from watching it average into losing positions
  • Marketing language about “quantum” and “AI” feels very oversold

If you still want to try it

  • Treat it like a speculative side bet, not an “investment plan”
  • Start with the smallest deposit you are genuinely fine losing
  • Keep a simple log: daily balance vs a boring benchmark (like a broad ETF)
  • Decide in advance at what drawdown you will switch it off

Quantum Ai is not an obvious outright deposit scam in my experience, but it also did not justify the hype. If you go in, go in with eyes open, tiny size, and clear exit rules.