Spirituality, New Age & Alternative Beliefs › General

Biowaves Prosperity Stone Lions Review 2026: Does It Work?

Approach with skepticism: A pair of decorative lion figurines sold with unsubstantiated energy claims. Worth testing inside the 60-day refund window only if buyers who genuinely like the look of stone lion.

Skeptical 3.2/10

You're here because something promised a shift and you want to verify it before you reach for your card.

Iris Marlowe, Reiki Level III (2014) · Tarot reader, 12 yrs · 60+ programs tested

Fair place to start. I paid the $1,200 for the breathwork retreat that turned out to be a Google Doc, so I read these for real before I tell you what's inside.

Reading the receipts

Three observable signals. Each one updates what's reasonable to believe — nothing more.

  1. Market traffic Gravity 0.6

    Effectively dormant. Almost nobody is making consistent sales right now. The offer is on the marketplace but the funnel is quiet.

  2. Vendor split $62.76 · 75%

    Vendor keeps a thin margin (75% to the affiliate). They're optimizing for affiliate enrollment over per-customer profit. The work might still be good — the math is just calibrated for scale.

Bottom line

A pair of decorative lion figurines sold with unsubstantiated energy claims. The $63 price is for the aesthetics; the 'biowave' story is marketing, not physics.

Visit official sales page →

Affiliate link — we earn a commission if you buy. How links work.

What works

  • You receive a tangible, holdable item — no PDF-only disappointment
  • The lion pair can function as neutral home decor if you ignore the claims
  • No recurring billing; one-time $63 charge at checkout
  • ClickBank's 60-day window gives you time to inspect the product
  • The placement guide offers basic feng shui advice that some buyers may find culturally interesting

Where it fails

  • Zero independent evidence that 'biowave' technology exists or does anything
  • Materials are almost certainly resin or painted composite, not carved stone
  • Refund requires you to ship the product back at your own expense — the guarantee is not free
  • The VSL and affiliate page lean heavily on conversion metrics ('FAT EPCs'), which are irrelevant to product quality
  • The 'prosperity' framing is designed to part you from $63, not to part you from financial difficulty

Best for

  • Buyers who genuinely like the look of stone lion statues and are willing to pay $63 for a decorative pair
  • Feng shui enthusiasts who collect symbolic objects and understand the cultural context without expecting literal magic

Avoid if

  • You expect a scientifically validated energy device — this is not that
  • You are uncomfortable paying return shipping if the product doesn't meet expectations
  • You are in a financially vulnerable place and hoping a $63 purchase will change your circumstances

What Biowaves Prosperity Stone Lions are, in one sentence.

A pair of resin lion figurines sold as prosperity-attracting “biowave” devices, priced at $63 through ClickBank with a 60-day refund window that requires you to ship the product back at your own cost.

The marketing calls them “high quality physical product” and “BRAND-NEW OFFER Your Prospects Can Hold.” They are correct on one point: you can hold them. The rest of the value proposition rests on a claim that the lions emit a proprietary energy field, which is not a claim that physics or independent testing supports.

What you actually get

Five items, only two of which you can put on a shelf:

  • Two lion figurines. Likely cast resin with a stone-look finish, roughly 4–6 inches tall. They look like the kind of decor you’d find in a home-goods aisle, marked up for the metaphysical frame.
  • A “biowave activation” sticker. Affixed to the base of each lion. This is the entire technology. No electronics, no power source, no measurable output.
  • A placement guide. A single sheet telling you to put the lions in the wealth corner of your home or office (standard feng shui advice, freely available online).
  • Digital upsell access. After purchase, you’ll be offered a prosperity meditation audio or similar digital add-on. It’s skippable and not part of the $63.
  • The refund window. 60 days, ClickBank-backed, but physical return required. You pay return shipping; original shipping is not refunded. This is not a risk-free trial.

How the marketing oversells

The ClickBank listing is written for affiliates, not buyers. Lines like “Converts Like CRAZY” and “FAT EPC’s” are affiliate-recruitment language. They tell you the sales page is good at getting people to click “buy.” They tell you nothing about whether the product does what it claims.

The VSL (video sales letter) likely frames the lions as a prosperity solution, using testimonials and urgency. We have not reviewed the full VSL, but the pattern is consistent across this subcategory: a story about energy, frequency, and financial breakthrough, anchored to a physical object that “holds” the vibration.

The mismatch is this: you are buying two resin lions with a sticker. The marketing is selling you a financial transformation. The gap between those two things is where the profit lives.

What it costs and how the refund works

$63 one-time at checkout. No recurring billing. Shipping is additional — expect $7–$12 for domestic delivery.

The 60-day refund window is real, but it works differently for physical goods. You must return the lions in resalable condition. ClickBank processes the refund after the vendor confirms receipt. Return shipping is on you. If you paid $63 plus $10 shipping, and return shipping costs $8, you’re out $18 to test a product that didn’t deliver. That’s the math the guarantee language doesn’t highlight.

Where the affiliate page misleads buyers

Two specific points to flag:

“High conversions, FAT EPC’s, killer copy” — This is the vendor talking to affiliates, not to you. EPC (earnings per click) is an affiliate metric. High conversions mean the sales page is persuasive, not that the product is effective. Confusing the two is a common ClickBank pitfall.

“A BRAND-NEW OFFER Your Prospects Can Hold” — The physicality is framed as a trust signal. In practice, it means the refund is harder and more expensive than a digital product. A PDF you can refund with an email; a statue you have to box up and ship back. The friction is intentional.

Who should buy, who should skip

Buy this if you like the way the lions look and $63 is an acceptable price for two decorative objects. If the “biowave” story adds a layer of meaning you enjoy, treat it as entertainment, not investment.

Skip this if you are looking for a prosperity tool that works outside of your own psychology. Skip it if you cannot afford to lose the return shipping cost. Skip it if you have ever clicked on a “manifestation” product hoping this one would be different — it won’t be.

The honest read

Biowaves Prosperity Stone Lions are a physical product with a metaphysical price tag. The lions themselves are unremarkable resin decor. The “biowave” claim is a sticker. The refund policy is real but not free.

If you want a pair of lion statues, there are cheaper ones without the story. If you want the story, know that you’re paying for a narrative, not a technology. The market signal — low gravity, high affiliate payout — tells you this is an offer built to convert, not to satisfy.

Pyrebrand earns a commission if you buy, and earns nothing if you don’t. That’s the only reason we can write this plainly: the truth costs us nothing.

— House Editor

Here's what I'd actually do

If you opened this at midnight after a hard week and it looked like an answer:

Close this tab. Biowaves Prosperity Stone Lions is one of the products I would actively redirect a friend away from. The refund exists, but the hope you'll spend reading it doesn't come back.

Don't buy this if: Do not buy this if it leans on "ancient" recordings, fake DMT testimonials, or empty Google Drives. Those are the patterns to walk away from immediately.

Iris Marlowe

Questions, briefly answered

FAQ

Is Biowaves Prosperity Stone Lions a scam?

You will receive a physical product. Scam implies no delivery. What you get are two lion statues with a sticker — the 'biowave' claim is unsubstantiated, but the transaction itself is not fraudulent.

What do I actually receive in the mail?

Two lion figurines (likely resin), a small sticker or card attached to the base, and a simple instruction sheet. No batteries, no electronic components. The 'biowave' is claimed to be embedded in the material.

How does the 60-day refund work for a physical product?

You must return the lions in good condition. ClickBank will process the refund once the vendor confirms receipt. You pay return shipping; original shipping is not refunded. It is not a risk-free trial.

Do the lions actually attract prosperity?

There is no mechanism by which a resin figurine can influence your financial situation. Any perceived results are placebo, confirmation bias, or coincidence. Buy them as decoration, not as a financial plan.

Sources

  1. Vendor sales page — ClickBank-listed sales page (active as of catalog import)

How this works

This isn't sponsored. I don't take money from vendors. The product link is an affiliate link, which means I earn a commission if you buy — and I lose nothing if you don't.

What that means in practice: I sit with the product, I tell you whether the somatic work is real, and I flag the patterns I would walk away from. The refund window is real. The rating is what I'd tell a friend after a long phone call.

Visit official sales page →

While you're here

Three more on the bench.