Well if you take the product and it works what are you going to do.... I am not a scientific person but I am very, very experienced and know what I'm seeing. I don't really care if it looks good on paper.
I'll take facts and science over your amazing experience. When will people learn anecdotal reports from online dip shits mean nothing.
All i want to know is A) what the hell is it or B) a fuzzy mechanism of action.... I'm not asking for USP to show its hand completely or list specific extractions.
You shouldn't have to do 30 searches to even find out what the hell a new product is. All I know now is that its called Prime and its "amazing!" I'd like a lil something more tangible. Sorry
Aside from that, these claims are just getting way out of hand. Im sorry, I hate to rain on the parade. This is not a slam on USP alone - it is the entire industry as whole. It is just getting really silly. It is a bit disgraceful actually. I am a proponent of supplementation and better living through chemistry but this is just getting comical. 85% of the products I see on the shelves are completely useless.
Marketing a "pro-hormone" or a "
Asteroid" (wtf is that anyway) along with pro-hormone effects but then saying it has zero hormonal effect is borderline fraud and clear false advertising. An FDA regulated drug company would get their ass sued for spouting such oxymoronic things. It simply CANT BE. Anabolic growth is pretty simple - hormones + calories. That's about it. However, as we all know. Just about any outlandish claims can be made in the supplement world.
From what I have seen, USP started out innovative and then slowly transitioned into deceptive. I guess that's the nature of the beast and the industry we all love.