Scitec’s Jumbo Pak is a very high quality supplement, the formula is about equal to Animal Pak. The impressive part is that Jumbo is the little brother of Monster 100. It has been looked in to here before but this is the first time we have had hands on the product. Not only does Scitec destroy any and every challenger with it’s range, the doses are beyond anything available.
When Vita Freak said it was the most complete multi it sent a message to Animal. It’s contents did end up being worthy of comparing which is more than can be said about most others. However Monster 100 needs no outrageous claim, no fancy promotional image, the following numbers are going to say it all.
Vitamin A – 15,000IU / 4,450IU
Vitamin B6 – 108mg / 90mg
Vitamin B12 – 208mcg / 11mcg
Vitamin C – 1,750mg / 500mg
Folic acid – 533mcg / 200mcg
Zinc – 20mg / 15mg
These are the basic numbers that make up the start of Monster’s power. It is impossible to find a supplement that can make Animal Pak look this weak. There are loads of other ingredients that the Pak does not have but from the complexes that it does, amino acid, performance, antioxidant and enzyme complex, it has a slight hand up. Animal use full label transparency so it is easy to figure out it’s EAA’s out number Monster’s 1.2g matrix.
Pak’s heavy amino acid dose is the reason it’s protein count is at 3g and why it feels significantly heavier than a single Monster bag. It would cost around $10 at most to purchase a supplement that will make up for that only downside. The fact that it has a low amino shot makes it’s 12 pill count even more impressive.
The part where Monster 100 excels is in the complexes. It combines the range of Armor-V with the doses of Animal Pak and the high quality variety Scitec always brings. On top of the extra ingredients it has continuing on after the vitamins it packs a green nutrients, probiotic, vegetable oil, greens, herbal, enzyme, monster fat incerator containing Pentacarn their many l-carnitine forms. Max power, monster pump, test, (small) EAA and finally a joint care blend.
If the high vitamin doses do not spike some results all the extras surely will. The ingredients are not unheard of, and can be found in other supplements. The major selling point is that they are all in one single product. Most of the contents may not seem that exciting, common and in some cases already a part of your stack, but again remember, this is all packed into just one supplement.
The price tag compared to the Animal Pak is what tops it off. At a good estimate if it were on sale in America it would retail for around $30. It includes 30 packs which supplies a full month’s worth, something that the Animal does not do on hardcore use.
The last thing to touch on is the possible confusion that Jumbo might cause. It is a tiny bit cheaper than Monster 100 and has similar contents. They are two very different supplements and will be a waste taken together. The servings in Jumbo are spread across two packs so the doses are significantly higher. It’s range is a lot smaller and as mentioned at the start, it is more on level with Animal Pak.
Instead of the healthy, natural extract combinations Jumbo does what most of the other Scitec supplements do. It takes blends from the lower priced more individual products. It destroys Monster’s amino acid blend with an advanced matrix totaling 7.8g, which is more than 6 times stronger than the bigger brother. Aside from that it contains Mega Joint-X their joint care supp, Pentacarn (like Monster), Crea-Bomb and Hemo NO (all of those can be purchased as whole supplements).
If you haven’t noticed, enough can’t be said about Scitec’s Monster 100. The range is unheard of and the ingredients doses have never been seen outside of users cooking up their own capsule cocktails. When this lands in the US, it is not a question of whether or not it will stir trouble, it is how much it will shake up the market. In particular the vitamin category.