What we do
We read product pages, ingredient lists, refund terms, and supporting articles, then compare those claims with publicly available evidence and with basic buyer common sense. The goal is not to sound medical. The goal is to help people make calmer decisions.
That means we look for the same things careful readers usually care about:
- Whether the claims are overstated
- Whether the ingredient story makes sense
- Whether the page is hiding practical details behind sales copy
- Whether the content is useful even if you decide not to buy
What we do not do
We do not diagnose medical conditions. We do not promise results. We do not pretend a supplement review can replace a doctor, pharmacist, or proper evaluation. If a page on this site sounds more certain than the evidence allows, that is something we should fix.
How we make money
Some pages contain affiliate links. If a reader buys through one of those links, we may earn a commission. That does not change the price for the buyer.
We prefer being plain about this. The site is commercial. The better question is whether the content is still useful when you ignore the sales link. That is the standard we try to hold.
How we try to keep the writing honest
We cut inflated language
Words like revolutionary, breakthrough, and clinically proven are easy to write and often weak on meaning.
We keep uncertainty visible
If the evidence is thin, mixed, or indirect, the page should say that plainly.
We focus on buyer questions
Price, side effects, label clarity, and refund terms matter as much as the ingredient story.
Who writes the site
The editorial work is led by D. Chouaib. You can also read the full review methodology, the affiliate disclosure, and the privacy page if you want the operational side of the site in plain English.