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Dux utilizes Alzchem’s Creavitalis in its more premium creatine Crealive

Dux Nutrition Crealive

Dux Nutrition is no stranger to the creatine category, it already has two competitors on the market in Creatine Monohydrate and the simpler named Creatine. Both are bulk standalone supplements, although the difference between them is the former relies entirely on standard creatine monohydrate, and the latter is based on premium Creapure creatine. Now available alongside those two is Crealive, a separate product but still centered around the time-tested muscle builder.

The all-new Crealive from Dux Nutrition relies on another branded form of creatine, not the same as Creapure but from the same parent company, Alzchem. That ingredient is Creavitalis, promoted as being an extremely pure and premium creatine monohydrate, supporting all of the usual muscle strength and size benefits. The difference with Creavitalis is that it’s extraordinarily fine and essentially tasteless, and was intended for the mainstream food industry and its many avenues.

Alzchem’s Creavitalis seems to be a slightly more premium creatine than its original and widely known Creapure, and that is reflected in the price of Dux Nutrition’s newly released Crealive when put next to Creatine Monohydrate and Creatine. The direct price on an unflavored 300g bottle of Crealive is R$315.90 (61.45 USD), which is about 7% more expensive than 300g of the brand’s Creapure-powered Creatine, and a staggering 53% over 300g of the standard Creatine Monohydrate.