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expired Posted by TattyBear | Staff • Last Monday
expired Posted by TattyBear | Staff • Last Monday

10.3-Oz Key Nutrients Pre-Workout Hydration Powder (Blue Raspberry)

w/ Subscribe & Save

$9.00

$20

55% off
Amazon
24 Comments 12,159 Views
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Deal Details
Key Nutrients via Amazon has 10.3-Oz (30-Servings) Key Nutrients Pre-Workout Performance Hydration Electrolyte Powder w/ Caffeine (Blue Raspberry) on sale for $9.99 - $1 (10%) off when you checkout via Subscribe & Save = $8.99. Shipping is free w/ Prime or on $35+ orders.Thanks to Deal Hunter TattyBear for sharing this deal.

Features:
  • 5 key electrolytes no sugar (Calcium, Phosphorus, Chloride, Sodium, Potassium) to quench your thirst, prevent cramps, balance pH, and bounce back stronger
  • 150 mg of natural Caffeine (from InnovaTea) per serving, sourced from tea leaves for steady energy, faster reaction times, and reduced fatigue
  • Delicious blue raspberry electrolytes flavor easily dissolves

Editor's Notes

Written by jimmytx | Staff
  • About this Store:
  • Additional Information:
    • This offer is now $1 less (10% savings) than our front page deal price of $9.99 from April 2025 which earned 25 thumbs up.
    • Rated 4.2 out of 5 stars on Amazon based on over 25k customer reviews.
    • Please see the original post for additional details and/or view the Wiki and forum comments for further helpful discussion if available.

Original Post

Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Community Notes
About the Poster
Key Nutrients via Amazon has 10.3-Oz (30-Servings) Key Nutrients Pre-Workout Performance Hydration Electrolyte Powder w/ Caffeine (Blue Raspberry) on sale for $9.99 - $1 (10%) off when you checkout via Subscribe & Save = $8.99. Shipping is free w/ Prime or on $35+ orders.Thanks to Deal Hunter TattyBear for sharing this deal.

Features:
  • 5 key electrolytes no sugar (Calcium, Phosphorus, Chloride, Sodium, Potassium) to quench your thirst, prevent cramps, balance pH, and bounce back stronger
  • 150 mg of natural Caffeine (from InnovaTea) per serving, sourced from tea leaves for steady energy, faster reaction times, and reduced fatigue
  • Delicious blue raspberry electrolytes flavor easily dissolves

Editor's Notes

Written by jimmytx | Staff
  • About this Store:
  • Additional Information:
    • This offer is now $1 less (10% savings) than our front page deal price of $9.99 from April 2025 which earned 25 thumbs up.
    • Rated 4.2 out of 5 stars on Amazon based on over 25k customer reviews.
    • Please see the original post for additional details and/or view the Wiki and forum comments for further helpful discussion if available.

Original Post

Community Voting

Deal Score
+25
Good Deal
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Top Comments

This is complete garbage.

It doesn't tell you at all how much Beta-Alanine, Betaine Anhydrous, L-Citrulline, and L-Tyrosine are in it, indicating there is barely any of it in there. All it says is 150 mg caffeine.

These are called Bucket formulas, they list a bunch of ingredients under a proprietary blend so they don't have to tell you how much of each ingredient is in there, just to list a bunch of ingredients. The amount of each is likely non effective and worthless.
So…. You're paying $10 for 30 servings of 150mg of caffeine.
Nutricost has 500 200 mg or 100 mg caffeine pills for $15. They also have a caffeine/l-theanine combination option.

The electrolyte amount is very small.
Buy nutricost caffeine pills and salt for the same effect magnitudes cheaper.

Add BulkSupplements magnesium malate, potassium, and whatever supplements you'd like (l-citrilline, beta alanine, creatine, tyrosine, etc.) for a much more powerful and cheaper product.

Can use Nutricost electrolytes 120 servings powder for flavor.
Prop blend, pass. Consumers demand transparency.
Got it on the last sale. Gave me bad gas and stomach issues. Threw it in the trash.

24 Comments

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Last Monday
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tmony
Last Monday
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Will give it a shot, hopefully it's worth it
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wolvyne
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I like their regular electrolyte drinks for after workout or sauna. In for 1 pre-workout to try.
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RespectSlickyD
Last Monday
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank RespectSlickyD

This is complete garbage.

It doesn't tell you at all how much Beta-Alanine, Betaine Anhydrous, L-Citrulline, and L-Tyrosine are in it, indicating there is barely any of it in there. All it says is 150 mg caffeine.

These are called Bucket formulas, they list a bunch of ingredients under a proprietary blend so they don't have to tell you how much of each ingredient is in there, just to list a bunch of ingredients. The amount of each is likely non effective and worthless.
So…. You're paying $10 for 30 servings of 150mg of caffeine.
Nutricost has 500 200 mg or 100 mg caffeine pills for $15. They also have a caffeine/l-theanine combination option.

The electrolyte amount is very small.
Buy nutricost caffeine pills and salt for the same effect magnitudes cheaper.

Add BulkSupplements magnesium malate, potassium, and whatever supplements you'd like (l-citrilline, beta alanine, creatine, tyrosine, etc.) for a much more powerful and cheaper product.

Can use Nutricost electrolytes 120 servings powder for flavor.
Last edited by RespectSlickyD May 5, 2025 at 12:05 PM.
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Walstar2
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Prop blend, pass. Consumers demand transparency.
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mariox
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Got it on the last sale. Gave me bad gas and stomach issues. Threw it in the trash.
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AmusedDime497
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Wow expensive
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amjosh
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They do say 1.6gm of Beta Alanine and 3Gm of L citruline. They are about half of what you really need. So you can double up, still cheaper than most. But quantities of Tyrosine and others are still unknown. I would still pass.

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Kairi
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Quote from RespectSlickyD :
This is complete garbage. It doesn't tell you at all how much Beta-Alanine, Betaine Anhydrous, L-Citrulline, and L-Tyrosine are in it, indicating there is barely any of it in there. All it says is 150 mg caffeine.These are called Bucket formulas, they list a bunch of ingredients under a proprietary blend so they don't have to tell you how much of each ingredient is in there, just to list a bunch of ingredients. The amount of each is likely non effective and worthless.So…. You're paying $10 for 30 servings of 150mg of caffeine.Nutricost has 500 200 mg or 100 mg caffeine pills for $15. They also have a caffeine/l-theanine combination option.The electrolyte amount is very small. Buy nutricost caffeine pills and salt for the same effect magnitudes cheaper. Add BulkSupplements magnesium malate, potassium, and whatever supplements you'd like (l-citrilline, beta alanine, creatine, tyrosine, etc.) for a much more powerful and cheaper product. Can use Nutricost electrolytes 120 servings powder for flavor.
1600mg Beta-Alanine. 3000mg L-Citrulline Malate.


You would know this if you did some research on it.

It was easy to find via a google search, much quicker than the time to type your entire comment.
1
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BrotherO
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I don't even think it's appropriate for a pre workout to be this cheap. Hell no i don't even need to read ingredients
1
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CanAmerIndian
Last Monday
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Save yourself money and from untested things. Make your own. It's not hard. Buy bulk beta alanine, citrulline malate, BCAA blend, and caffeine. Mix. Enjoy. Save $$ and know exactly what you're putting into your body.
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Milk4Ever
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Quote from RespectSlickyD :
This is complete garbage. It doesn't tell you at all how much Beta-Alanine, Betaine Anhydrous, L-Citrulline, and L-Tyrosine are in it, indicating there is barely any of it in there. All it says is 150 mg caffeine.These are called Bucket formulas, they list a bunch of ingredients under a proprietary blend so they don't have to tell you how much of each ingredient is in there, just to list a bunch of ingredients. The amount of each is likely non effective and worthless.So…. You're paying $10 for 30 servings of 150mg of caffeine.Nutricost has 500 200 mg or 100 mg caffeine pills for $15. They also have a caffeine/l-theanine combination option.The electrolyte amount is very small. Buy nutricost caffeine pills and salt for the same effect magnitudes cheaper. Add BulkSupplements magnesium malate, potassium, and whatever supplements you'd like (l-citrilline, beta alanine, creatine, tyrosine, etc.) for a much more powerful and cheaper product. Can use Nutricost electrolytes 120 servings powder for flavor.
I agree that it's not a good product. But to be fair, amount for B-alanine, Citrulline, and caffeine is stated on the label and the product pics on amazon.

I have their electrolyte mix. It's cloyingly sweet with too much stevia, even at a quarter of their recommended dose.
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dontbanme
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Quote from RespectSlickyD :
This is complete garbage.

It doesn't tell you at all how much Beta-Alanine, Betaine Anhydrous, L-Citrulline, and L-Tyrosine are in it, indicating there is barely any of it in there. All it says is 150 mg caffeine.

These are called Bucket formulas, they list a bunch of ingredients under a proprietary blend so they don't have to tell you how much of each ingredient is in there, just to list a bunch of ingredients. The amount of each is likely non effective and worthless.
So…. You're paying $10 for 30 servings of 150mg of caffeine.
Nutricost has 500 200 mg or 100 mg caffeine pills for $15. They also have a caffeine/l-theanine combination option.

The electrolyte amount is very small.
Buy nutricost caffeine pills and salt for the same effect magnitudes cheaper.

Add BulkSupplements magnesium malate, potassium, and whatever supplements you'd like (l-citrilline, beta alanine, creatine, tyrosine, etc.) for a much more powerful and cheaper product.

Can use Nutricost electrolytes 120 servings powder for flavor.
Need an ophthalmologist, amigo? Amount of Beta-Alanine,L-Citrulline is right on the box. And even bigger in the second picture
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Roughy
Last Tuesday
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Quote from RespectSlickyD :
This is complete garbage.

It doesn't tell you at all how much Beta-Alanine, Betaine Anhydrous, L-Citrulline, and L-Tyrosine are in it, indicating there is barely any of it in there. All it says is 150 mg caffeine.

These are called Bucket formulas, they list a bunch of ingredients under a proprietary blend so they don't have to tell you how much of each ingredient is in there, just to list a bunch of ingredients. The amount of each is likely non effective and worthless.
So…. You're paying $10 for 30 servings of 150mg of caffeine.
Nutricost has 500 200 mg or 100 mg caffeine pills for $15. They also have a caffeine/l-theanine combination option.

The electrolyte amount is very small.
Buy nutricost caffeine pills and salt for the same effect magnitudes cheaper.

Add BulkSupplements magnesium malate, potassium, and whatever supplements you'd like (l-citrilline, beta alanine, creatine, tyrosine, etc.) for a much more powerful and cheaper product.

Can use Nutricost electrolytes 120 servings powder for flavor.

This person knows.

Go snag the Supp.co app - I'm not affiliated, etc. I've just used it to help dial-in how I use supplements, and the rankings and ratings that they provide will help you steer clear of bargain bin, garbage-laced trash and get you toward better quality supplements in general.

And just in case the "black coffee and banana" crowd shows up in support of that pre-workout (they're not wrong; it's just not for everyone), you can also check out some of the options at True Nutrition for pre- and intra-workouts for some solid starting points, and mix in some additional things from BulkSupplements, as mentioned. Good stuff there. (Also not affiliated)
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MostBased
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Quote from CanAmerIndian :
Save yourself money and from untested things. Make your own. It's not hard. Buy bulk beta alanine, citrulline malate, BCAA blend, and caffeine. Mix. Enjoy. Save $$ and know exactly what you're putting into your body.

I recently did this after my go to pre-workout, Legion Pulse, nerfed their product. I used to get an amazing workout with only half a dose, one scoop, and now it takes the full dose, two scoops, to get the same effect. They aren't cheap either at $40 per 20 servings.

I highly recommend going this route and making your own pre workout so you can tailor to your needs exactly while saving $$$.
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RespectSlickyD
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Quote from Kairi :
1600mg Beta-Alanine. 3000mg L-Citrulline Malate.


You would know this if you did some research on it.

It was easy to find via a google search, much quicker than the time to type your entire comment.
If they don't bother to list it on their label on amazon that's ridiculous

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