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Freelance Resources India

Why You Shouldn't Fall for the "100,000 PLR/MRR Products" Bundle Available at $9

  • Writer: Eniokos
    Eniokos
  • May 31
  • 4 min read

If you are exploring PLR MRR products, you have seen these ads.

Hundreds of thousands of PLR and MRR digital products for the price of a cup of coffee. The sales copy is amazing, and the promised income life-changing.

Before you buy, read this.

What PLR and MRR Actually Mean

A quick note on terminology:

PLR (Private Label Rights) means you buy content, can edit it, rebrand it, and sell it as your own. You are buying a license to claim authorship and modify the work.

MRR (Master Resale Rights) means you can sell the product to others, and those buyers can also resell it, typically without modifying it. The chain of resellers can extend almost indefinitely.

Both models are legitimate in principle. In practice, bulk bundles being sold today have serious, recurring problems that new digital workers need to understand before spending a single rupee.

Man works on a laptop showing Google Drive at a warm-lit desk; mug reads Curated content & brand trust > bulk noise.

Problem 1: The Files Are Frequently Unusable

Many of these bundles arrive via Google Drive links. What awaits you is a labyrinth: zipped folders containing more zipped folders, running four or five directory levels deep before you reach anything resembling an actual product.

This is not just inconvenient, it is often technically unusable. File paths grow so long that the operating system refuses to open them, especially on Windows systems.

Users across digital product communities report files that are "unopenable and corrupted" even after using third-party unzipping software. You paid for something you cannot access.

Problem 2: The Numbers Are Inflated and Quality Shoddy

The folders within will say, 10,000 video reels ready to use. What is inside maybe very different. Poor quality reels, and perhaps 3000 in number.

It is very difficult to count the number of files within folders of Google Drive, when the number of files are in thousands.

NOTE: How to count the number of files in a google drive folder? One of the ways you can do it is by using Google Colab.

Some sellers even acknowledge duplicates in fine print while still advertising millions of items.

I think each reseller has an incentive to round up when repackaging and relisting. The original 3,000 items become 5,000 in the next listing, and 10,000 in the one after that. No new content was created. Only the number changed.

And finally, the quality of the e-books, images, videos, and designs in these bulk PLR Packages are extremely poor. You cannot sell them on in good faith.

Problem 3: The Licensing Is Dubious

This is the most serious concern for anyone building a real business.

When you buy a bulk PLR bundle, you receive a text file asserting that you have rights to use and resell the contents. What you do not receive is any verification that the original seller had those rights. A seller might have written original content, or they might have scraped articles, recipes, and guides from across the web and lightly reformatted them. There is no reliable way to tell the difference.

Copyright lawyers and educators have noted that buying in good faith does not shield you from legal exposure if the underlying content was stolen. In bulk bundles, this risk compounds with every layer of reselling.

Problem 4: The Market Is Saturated by Design

Industry observers estimate over 15 million such products are already circulating in the done-for-you digital market. Because PLR and MRR products are sold to multiple buyers simultaneously, sellers end up working from identical libraries. Buyers encounter the exact same products across dozens of different storefronts.

But, this is the model. Every new buyer becomes a potential new seller of identical goods. Critics have called it a modern pyramid scheme: thousands of sellers competing with the same content, on the same platforms, wondering why no one is buying.

The only way you can actually resell thousands of poor quality unusable products is by fooling another new reseller, like a pyramid scheme, and never to the actual end user.


Problem 5: It Undermines the Brand You Are Trying to Build

If you are a new digital worker trying to establish credibility, selling recycled, unverifiable content works against you from day one. These products are generic by design. They reflect no expertise, no personality, and no understanding of your audience.

Brand trust is built on recognizable, consistent value. Bulk PLR bundles, by definition, offer nothing that distinguishes you from the next reseller down the chain.

So Who Should Buy Ultra Large PLR-MRR Bundles?

Honestly, a narrow use case exists. If your aim is a purely transactional, anonymous storefront with no long-term ambitions, a bulk bundle may serve you briefly. The clearest test: would you buy this product if you had no intention of reselling it? If the only appeal is the resale opportunity, that is your answer.

But if you want to be known for something, if you want customers to return and refer others, the answer is no.

What to Do Instead

Buy small, curated PLR-MRR bundles from verifiable sources with clear, documented licensing. Modify them meaningfully: add your own perspective, update the information, and rewrite in your voice. Or better yet, create original products on topics you genuinely understand.

One well-made, useful ebook will outlast a lakh of unusable, unverifiable, already-everywhere files. In digital products, volume without substance is just noise.

PLR (Private Label Rights): a license to buy, edit, and resell content as your own. MRR (Master Resale Rights): a license to resell a product as-is, often passing that resale right to your buyers. DFY (Done For You): pre-made products or business setups sold ready to use.

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