keccers
@keccers.eth
I didn't when he asked, but now I do. This is the type of question that slams the emergency brake on my focus and immediately diverts it. The TLDR: Gruns are a pretty decent, albeit generic, multivitamin. There's 100% daily value of most essential vitamins, and 25% daily value of a few key trace minerals. There's a lot of sugar in these relative to the total serving size. 40% of the product (8g) is sugar. (to their credit, they do offer a 0 sugar option that uses allulose, but it is more expensive.) The ingredients that drive most of the claims on the website are present in very small amounts. And the things they claim are egregious. As I say in the piece, they say they can do so much I'm almost offended they also can't get me a boyfriend. Click in for the deep dive. There's lots of pictures as well as a comparision to Nutricost's multivitamin. https://paragraph.com/@keccers/whats-the-deal-with-gruns-gummies
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keccers
@keccers.eth
It’s genuinely wrong how expensive these gummies are, too. I find it offensive actually Even on a subscription plan the vitamins come in more expensive than my special blind person disposable contacts on a per day basis
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tomato
@tomatoxyz
The price of some supplements and nutrients is truly ludicrous if you're not careful about it. One of my friends uses electrolytes that come in sachets (it's some trendy brand) and they're not only ridiculously expensive, but much less potent (you need to take like 5 sachets a day). I just get boring generic ones that cost about 10% of the price and only need to take one.
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tyler ↑
@trh
I was curious until I saw the price. Even before your analysis (thank you!) with my “discount “I decided it was silly. Why yes, I already overspent on creatine gummies, why do you ask?
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downshift 🫴🪵🔥
@downshift.eth
despicable. abhorrent. we need Mark Cuban on the beat
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