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BeBlessedMe Review- Faceless “Christian” App with Muslim Ties 2

BeBlessedMe Review: Faceless “Christian” Registered in Ajman, United Arab Emirates

BeBlessedMe sells itself as a gentle Christian app to help you fall asleep to “soothing Bible audio stories” and “study God’s Word through audio.”

What almost nobody sees from the front end is this:

  • The app is owned and operated by Prototipo FZE LLC, a private tech company registered in Ajman, United Arab Emirates.
  • The main website, beblessed.me, is hidden behind a WHOIS privacy service, so you cannot see the domain’s real owner.
  • There are no named pastors, leaders, or even founders. No statement of faith. No clear confession that Jesus Christ is the Son of God anywhere in the public marketing.
  • There are already plenty of complaints online about “free trials” that quietly turn into surprise charges.

In other words, this looks a lot more like a faceless subscription product with Bible flavor than an honest Christian ministry.

The Company Behind BeBlessed: Prototipo FZE LLC In Ajman, UAE

Start with the simple question: Who actually owns this thing?

The App Store and Google Play are not shy about it. If you scroll down on the app listings, Prototipo FZE LLC is clearly shown as the developer and seller:

If you dig into trademark and company data, it gets even clearer.

A United States trademark filing for BEBLESSED lists:

  • Prototipo FZE LLC
  • Business Club – BLA-BC6-546 – Ajman Boulevard Commercial
  • Ajman, United Arab Emirates

You can see that on the USPTO and TrademarkElite pages here:

Business directories like Infobel also list Prototipo FZE LLC at Ajman Boulevard Commercial as a computer and software firm:

Ajman Boulevard itself is not some church campus. It is an office development inside the Ajman Free Zone designed to attract local and foreign investors, with modern offices and cost-effective corporate facilities:

So behind the Christian-sounding app, you have:

  • A private limited liability company
  • In a free zone office block in a Muslim majority country
  • Operating as a tech and software business

That does not automatically make them bad. But it is a completely different story from “a Christian ministry built an app.”

How The People Behind BeBlessed Hide Their Identity

For something that claims to handle “God’s Word” and speak to people’s spiritual life, BeBlessed is aggressively faceless.

WHOIS privacy wall

The domain beblessed.me is not registered in the open under Prototipo’s name. If you look up the WHOIS info, you see:

  • Organisation: “Privacy service provided by Withheld for Privacy ehf.
  • Registrant name, address, phone, email: all redacted or hidden

Scamadviser’s automated report lays that out for you:

Security tools like Gridinsoft show the same pattern, flagging it as a newly registered, privacy protected domain:

So if a normal person says “who owns beblessed.me?” they hit a privacy proxy, not the actual company.

For a commercial app that might be annoying. For something that claims to feed Christians spiritually, it is a big red flag.

No founders, pastors, or team

Look at the public facing presence:

All the app directory sites repeat this:

And the review aggregators use the same anonymous structure:

There is no “About Our Team” page with pastors, no doctrinal statement, no named leaders taking responsibility for the theology or the money: just a brand, an LLC, and a privacy shield.

Same company, different product: GoInvisible

It gets more interesting when you notice that Prototipo also runs a product called GoInvisible, designed to scrub people’s data from the internet.

Scroll down and look at the footer or legal info. You will see the same Ajman address and company name:

BLA-BC6-546 – Ajman Boulevard Commercial, Ajman, UAE
© 2025 Prototipo FZE LLC. All rights reserved.

So:

  • The same company that hides its ownership of beblessed.me behind a privacy service
  • Also sells a “be anonymous online” service from the same address

This is not a transparent ministry. It is a privacy-obsessed tech company that does not want its people in the spotlight.

What They Tell Regulators: Mindfulness And Sleep App, Not Christian Ministry

When you look at what Prototipo told the United States Patent and Trademark Office, you do not see the language of the ministry. You see the language of a wellness app.

In the BEBLESSED trademark filing, they describe the app as:

“Downloadable mobile application software for accessing and providing audio and visual content in the fields of spiritual mindfulness, meditation, faith, health, well-being, and mental health … for guided meditation, prayer, promoting sleep, enabling the creation and use of digital journals, and streaming and playing music.”

You can read that text yourself here:

The European Union trademark entry for BeBlessed uses similar language, focusing on spiritual mindfulness and mental health, not on proclaiming Jesus:

So in the app stores, they lean hard into “Bible stories” and “God’s Word.” In the legal filings, they describe it like any other spirituality themed wellness and sleep app.

No mention of the cross. No mention of the resurrection. No mention of Jesus Christ as Son of God. That is not a small omission if you claim to serve Christians.

The Theological Gap: Where Is Jesus As The Son Of God?

From a Christian standpoint, this is the core test: does the app clearly confess who Jesus is, or does it just sell Bible flavored background noise.

Read the public descriptions.

Apple App Store:

“BeBlessed lets you listen to narrated Bible stories with immersive background sound. Try a new, engaging way to end your day on a reflective note while studying God’s Word through audio.”

That language is repeated across App Store country variants:

Google Play says the same thing in its description:

Third party directories echo it:

Everywhere you look, the phrases are:

  • Bible stories
  • Bible parables
  • “God’s Word”
  • Sleep, peace, reflection

What you never see in the public marketing:

  • “Jesus Christ is the Son of God.”
  • “The cross and the resurrection”
  • Any doctrinal statement or creed

The stories themselves may be loosely accurate Bible narratives. The issue is that the central confession of Christianity never shows up in the one place the company controls completely: its own marketing.

Operating from a Muslim majority country with tight religious controls, describing the product as spiritual mindfulness and sleep promotion in legal filings, then keeping public copy at “safe” generic God-talk is not an accident. It is a business decision.

The User Experience: Free Trials, Repeated Charges, And Low Trust Scores

If Prototipo were handling money like saints, you could argue this is just clumsy branding. The billing pattern makes it worse.

Real users are calling it a scam

Trustpilot and app review sites are full of people using one particular word: “scam.”

Browse the reviews and you will see multiple reports like:

  • People signing up for a “7 day free trial” and being charged almost immediately.
  • Multiple charges in a few days, often for different amounts.
  • Needing to call the bank and cancel the cards to make it stop.

AppsHunter’s review page for BeBlessedMe on iOS tells the same story:

You see things like:

  • “Huge scam”
  • “I thought I was signing up for a small weekly fee and got hit with multiple charges.”
  • “Free trial that was not free”

JustUseApp’s aggregated reviews show lots of complaints about surprise billing, confusing subscriptions, and weak support:

The App Store review section itself has users saying they were charged five times, over 100 dollars total, while they thought they were in a free trial:

That is not normal behavior for a company that wants to be above reproach in how it handles money.

Scam checkers are not impressed

Independent site checkers who examine technical signals and user reports also do not like what they see.

Scam Detector has a full page asking if beblessed.me is a scam, and ultimately labels it a suspicious website based on their scoring model:

Scamadviser likewise gives beblessed.me a low trust score and bluntly says “beblessed.me may be a scam”, citing negative reviews and hidden ownership:

Gridinsoft’s online scanner flags the young age of the domain and the privacy shield pattern, which matches how a lot of scam sites are set up:

So you have:

  • Hidden owner
  • Anonymous team
  • Reviews filled with “free trial” billing horror stories
  • Automated tools flagging the domain as risky

That is not great company for something that claims to serve your spiritual life.

Apps That Actually Show Their Face And Put Christ At The Center

If you are going to rip something apart, it is fair to point people toward better options. Here are a few apps that do the opposite of BeBlessed: they show who runs them, state what they believe, and are honest about what they are.

YouVersion Bible App

  • Built and run by Life.Church, a large evangelical church.
  • Publicly tied to Pastor Bobby Gruenewald as the founder.
  • Designed explicitly as a ministry tool to help people read and engage Scripture, free.

You can see the people and the church right here:

Bible.is (Faith Comes By Hearing)

  • A project of Faith Comes By Hearing, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit with decades of history getting audio Bibles out worldwide.
  • Clear mission, clear ministry identity, clear theology.

Check it yourself:

ESV Bible App (Crossway)

  • Produced by Crossway, a not for profit Christian ministry that publishes the ESV Bible and gospel centered books.
  • Crossway publishes its statement of faith and describes itself in plain language.

See:

Dwell Bible

  • Audio first Bible app.
  • Founded by Jonathan and Joshua Bailey, who are named and visible.
  • Focus is laser targeted: making Scripture the “soundtrack of your life.”

Your proof:

Abide (Christian Meditation)

  • A meditation and sleep app that is explicitly Christian.
  • They openly state that they hold the Bible as true and “profess the Nicene Creed as our statement of faith.”

Look at their own words:

These apps are not perfect, but they at least show you:

  • Who runs them
  • What they believe
  • How do they make money

Which is already miles ahead of a privacy cloaked LLC in Ajman telling you to trust its “Bible sleep stories.”

Bottom Line

BeBlessedMe looks, on the surface, like a comforting Christian app.

Once you pull on the threads, here is what you really get:

  • A private UAE tech company, Prototipo FZE LLC, based in a free zone office park at Ajman Boulevard Commercial.
  • A domain, beblessed.me, that hides its owner behind a WHOIS privacy service.
  • No visible pastors, founders, or Christian leaders. No statement of faith. No doctrinal transparency.
  • Legal filings that define the product as spiritual mindfulness and sleep software, not as a Christian ministry.
  • Public marketing that never clearly confesses that Jesus Christ is the Son of God.
  • A separate Prototipo product, GoInvisible, is dedicated to making people and data invisible online.
  • A trail of user complaints about “free trials” turning into multiple charges, and scam checkers flagging the site as suspicious.

You do not have to know exactly what the people behind it believe to make a practical call.

If you care about your faith and your wallet, BeBlessedMe looks far more like a faceless subscription product wrapped in Christian branding than a genuine, accountable Christian work.

There are plenty of apps where the ministry, the doctrine, and the money are on the table in daylight. You do not owe this one a second chance.

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