
The 100-year-old wealth classic
A best-selling book on attracting money and wealth, roughly a century old. The vendor says the film "The Secret" was based on it and notes it sells for around $20 on Amazon. Delivered digitally.
The verdict in one line: a legitimate, low-risk $39 audio tool with genuine science behind the technique and wildly oversold marketing on top of it. Worth a try if you go in with calm expectations and treat the 90-day refund window as your safety net.
Check Current Price & Availability$39 one-time · Instant download · 90-day money-back guarantee
The Genius Song is a digital download. There is no pill, no bottle and nothing shipped to your door.
Yes, in the sense that it is a real product: $39 buys a roughly 7-minute gamma-wave audio track plus four digital bonuses, delivered instantly by email through ClickBank, with a 90-day money-back guarantee. The 40 Hz technique it uses is studied in real neuroscience labs. The sales page, however, oversells it with an unverifiable NASA claim and a pen-name creator.
Short answer: The Genius Song is a digital audio product. The core of it is a single soundwave track of about seven minutes, built around gamma-frequency tones near 40 Hz, meant to be listened to through headphones. You pay $39 once, the download link lands in your inbox, and that is the whole product.
Let's clear up the biggest confusion first, because a lot of people land on the sales page expecting something else. This is not a supplement. No capsules, no powder, no bottle, no monthly shipment. Nothing arrives at your house.
There is also no app to download, no account to create, and no subscription quietly renewing on your card next month. You get an MP3 file. You put on headphones, you press play, and you sit with it for about seven minutes. That is genuinely it.
Alongside the track, the vendor bundles four digital bonuses (a book, a guided visualization, an infographic and a quick-start listening guide). We break those down in detail below, because they are a real part of what you are paying for.
If you are reading this, there is a decent chance you recognize yourself in the following. You read the same paragraph three times and still could not repeat it back. You open a browser tab and forget why by the time it loads. You downloaded a meditation app in January, felt good about it, and quietly abandoned it around day four.
You are not sick. You are not looking for a diagnosis. You are a functional adult somewhere between 30 and 55 whose focus has gotten slippery, and you are tired of the options on the table: another pill you have to remember to take, another subscription you will forget to cancel, another 30-day program that demands more discipline than the problem it is supposed to fix.
That is exactly the person this product is aimed at. Seven minutes, headphones, no habit-stack, no willpower tax. Whether it delivers is a different question, and that is what the rest of this review is for.
One core audio track and four digital bonuses. Everything is delivered by email the moment your ClickBank order goes through.
The main event: a single gamma-wave soundwave track, roughly seven minutes long, designed for headphone listening. Downloadable, yours to keep, plays on any phone, laptop or tablet. No app, no login, no streaming.

A best-selling book on attracting money and wealth, roughly a century old. The vendor says the film "The Secret" was based on it and notes it sells for around $20 on Amazon. Delivered digitally.

A guided visualization session from a top-rated creator on the Calm app, covering money, love, health and happiness. Of the four bonuses, this is the one buyers say they actually keep using.

A printable one-page infographic laying out the five habits behind "Create Your Ideal Future", plus the Quick Start listening guide that tells you how and when to play the track.
The vendor puts a $197 value on the four bonuses. Treat that number the way you treat every "value" figure in this industry: as marketing, not as a price you would ever pay. The bonuses are useful. They are not $197 of useful.
The claimed mechanism is brainwave entrainment. The idea is old and not especially exotic: play a rhythmic sound at a specific frequency, and brain activity tends to sync up with that rhythm. The Genius Song uses gamma frequency, around 40 Hz, which is the band associated with alert, engaged, "locked-in" mental states. The marketing calls it dropping into flow.
Here is the part that matters, and it is the reason this review exists.
40 Hz gamma entrainment is a real, peer-reviewed area of neuroscience. Serious researchers, including MIT and Harvard-affiliated teams, have published work on gamma stimulation. But that research studies the technique, in controlled lab conditions, with lab equipment. It is not a study of this $39 MP3 file. The Genius Song itself has zero published clinical trials.
Read that twice, because the sales page relies on you blurring those two things together. "There is real science on gamma frequency" and "there is science proving this specific track works" are completely different sentences. The first is true. The second has no evidence behind it that we could find.
This is what the real gamma research looks like: EEG caps, lab conditions, controlled measurement. None of it was performed on the audio file you are being sold.
That does not make the product worthless. Borrowing a legitimate technique and packaging it well is a perfectly reasonable thing to sell. Plenty of people find that rhythmic audio helps them settle into work, and there is no shortage of free binaural and gamma tracks on the internet that operate on the same principle. What you are paying $39 for is a produced, structured version of that with a listening guide and a refund window.
What you are not paying for is proof. Anyone selling you certainty about what a seven-minute audio file will do to your brain is selling you something they cannot deliver. Go in understanding that, and the purchase becomes a low-cost experiment rather than a leap of faith.
This is where an honest review has to slow down. The story the sales page tells and the story the fine print tells do not fully match, and you deserve to know that before you enter your card details.
The figure presented as the product's creator on the official sales page.
The product is sold under the name Dr. Robert Lake. The company's own Terms of Service acknowledges that this is a pen name. We are not accusing anyone of hiding it, because the company disclosed it themselves. But a pen name means there is no verifiable person, no verifiable credentials and no verifiable research record standing behind the claims.
The actual business entity behind the product is Happy Consumer LLC, registered in Puerto Rico. Payment and refunds are processed by ClickBank, which acts as the retailer.
The sales page describes the product as "NASA Neuroscientist-Recommended" and "developed by neuroscientists." We found no publicly verifiable evidence that NASA developed, tested, funded or endorsed this audio track. We are stating that plainly and neutrally: we could not verify it. Treat it as marketing language until someone produces a source.
The vendor's own disclaimers describe the material as being for entertainment purposes and describe the marketing presentation as dramatized. That is the company telling you, in the small text, not to take the big text literally. It is worth knowing that before you buy.
No product is all upside. Here is the real ledger, cons included.
1. Never listen while driving or operating machinery. The track is built to pull your attention inward. That is the last thing you want behind the wheel or near moving equipment. 2. If you have epilepsy or any history of seizure disorder, speak with your doctor before using any form of audio or light entrainment. This is a standard and serious precaution for this entire product category, not an alarmist one.
One price, one payment, one download. No tiers, no upgrades required, no recurring charge.
Secure ClickBank checkout · Instant download · 90 days to change your mind
Heads up about the checkout: after you pay, the vendor shows you a series of optional add-on offers (upsells) before you reach your download. You can decline every single one of them and you will still receive the full product and all four bonuses you paid for. Nothing you say no to is taken away from the $39 package. Just keep clicking past them until the download page loads.
This review is an independent analysis, not a paid endorsement. We read the vendor's own sales page and terms of service line by line, checked the published research on 40 Hz gamma entrainment, and compared what buyers report on independent review sites. Here is the pattern those reports describe, told plainly, with no numbers we cannot back up.
Seven minutes of tones. No lightning bolt, no clarity, no cinematic moment. Buyers who judge the product here almost always quit, and we suspect that is exactly what most of them do.
Not a feeling of genius. A feeling of starting. The most common report is that the gap between sitting down and actually beginning the work gets shorter. Whether that is entrainment or simply the ritual of seven quiet minutes without a phone in your hand, nobody can separate cleanly, and we are not going to pretend otherwise.
Where people stick with it daily, the descriptions stay small and specific: the morning block holds together better, fewer tab-and-forget moments. It is never described as dramatic. Consistency, not intensity, is what separates the people who report something from the people who report nothing.
Memory does not transform. Nobody gets smarter. Late-afternoon brain fog shows up exactly as it always did, because that is usually a sleep and caffeine problem and no audio file was ever going to fix it. Anyone telling you otherwise is selling.
A small, real, unglamorous help with getting started, sitting on top of a ritual that probably does some of the work by itself. Worth $39 to find out whether it does the same for you, with a 90-day refund window if it does not. Not worth the story the sales page tells about it. That is what 3.8 out of 5 means.
No. You pay $39 through ClickBank and you receive a real digital product: a roughly 7-minute audio track plus four bonuses, delivered by email. It is backed by a 90-day money-back guarantee. What is misleading is the marketing around it, not the delivery of the product. The sales page leans on a NASA association we could not verify and a creator name the company itself acknowledges is a pen name. That makes it oversold, not fraudulent.
Do not expect a single session to change your day. People who report a benefit generally describe it building over roughly two to four weeks (about 10 to 21 days) of listening consistently, usually once a day. If you try it twice and quit, you will not have given it a fair test. If you are still feeling nothing after a month of daily use, request the refund.
Refunds are handled by ClickBank, the retailer that processes the payment, not by the product creator. The vendor advertises a 90-day money-back guarantee. Keep the order confirmation email you get at purchase, since it contains the ClickBank order number you need. Contact ClickBank customer support with that number and request the refund inside the 90-day window.
Yes, and this is not optional. The entire premise of brainwave entrainment audio depends on delivering the sound cleanly and consistently to both ears. Laptop speakers, a phone speaker or a kitchen smart speaker defeat the purpose. Any ordinary wired or wireless headphones or earbuds will do. You do not need expensive or specialized audio gear.
Yes. It is an MP3 file, so it plays on essentially anything: iPhone, Android, laptop, tablet, or any music app that can open a downloaded audio file. There is no app to install, no login, and no subscription. Download the file once from the email link and it is yours to keep and play offline.
Never listen while driving or operating machinery. The track is designed to pull your attention inward and away from your surroundings, which is exactly the wrong state behind the wheel. For sleep it was not designed as a sleep aid, since gamma frequency is associated with alert focus rather than winding down. Use it awake, seated, with your eyes closed if you like.
The product is presented as the work of Dr. Robert Lake, but the company's own Terms of Service acknowledges that this is a pen name rather than a verifiable individual. The business behind the product is Happy Consumer LLC, registered in Puerto Rico. We found no publicly verifiable evidence supporting the sales page claim that NASA developed or endorsed this audio track.
For most healthy adults, listening to an audio track at a comfortable volume carries little risk. Two real cautions apply. Anyone with epilepsy or a history of seizure disorders should speak with a doctor before using any audio or light entrainment product. And never listen while driving or operating machinery. This product has not been evaluated by the FDA and is not medical advice or a treatment for any condition.
That is the entire argument for trying it. The technique has real research behind it, the marketing does not deserve your trust, and the guarantee means the honest way to settle the question is to test it on yourself. Listen daily for a few weeks. If nothing changes, ask ClickBank for your money back.
Get The Genius Song for $39 (One-Time)Instant digital delivery · Secure ClickBank checkout · 90-day money-back guarantee