You sir are spreading some serious FUD there because the subject is so easily googled. 🙄 A reverse split does nothing to the price of a regulation A offering. The SEC qualifies it at the stated price in the offering prospectus. A reg A price can be amended at any time. They could split the stock to $0.50 then amend the offering at will to $0.25. Reg A offering are typically sold at a steep discount to market. Right now it is priced at $0.001 to not spook the natives. 😅
Take a look at the last regulation offering for Raadr for example. Post qualification amendment filed February 28th 2024, was qualified by the SEC on march 13, A 253G1 filed the following day on March 14th amending the price for the offering to $0.0001. That isn't a typo, the previous CEO amended the offering for the third time post reverse split to sell a at $0.0001. 😆 The price can, and will, be through the life of the offering amended at will.
A reverse split will change the price per share in the Reg A offering. For example, if you originally planned to offer shares at $1, and you execute a 1-for-10 reverse split, the new offering price might become $10.