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Covaxil NuraDyne Review – What A Scam!

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Review Summary

Covaxil have deliberately presented this supplement as something that it is not. The NuraDyne box has been designed to make it look like a high grade pharmaceutical. They call their formula Reaxin-517. This might sound impressive, but in reality it’s just a gimmicky name they’ve given to their proprietary blend. There’s nothing special about this blend at all – it is a collection of natural nootropics, stimulants, and fruit extracts. There is no reason why they should have given it such a technical-sounding name other than to mislead people into thinking it is a research chemical or something. 

The proprietary blend contains lots of bogus ingredients and obvious fillers. Don’t waste your money on scam brain supplements like this. We especially want people to avoid giving their hard-earned cash to companies trying cheap tricks like Covaxil are here. Reaxin-517; what a joke!

 

Where To Buy NuraDyne

NuraDyne seems to be sold exclusively through Amazon. We can’t find an independent website. That’s never a good sign. 

 


Full Covaxil NuraDyne Review

 

NuraDyne is an exciting new brain supplements from Covaxil Laboratories. We can’t find an independent website for these guys, which is never a good sign. The only information we can find comes from third party product listings. They seem to sell a strange mix of products – a diet pill, a stimulant stack, and now NuraDyne, a nootropic.

What is NuraDyne supposed to do exactly?

Who is it designed for?

 

Covaxil NuraDyne box

 

NuraDyne promises to deliver the following key benefits to its users:

  • Increased information processing speed
  • Improved working memory
  • Accelerated memory recall
  • Better memory retention
  • Boosts alertness
  • Reduces mental fatigue
  • Enhances visual information processing

That’s hardly a small list of benefits!

If it can come good on half of these promises, we’ll be happy.

As you can see from the box, Covaxil think of NuraDyne as being in a different class to most other nootropics: “NuraDyne is more than a simple memory pill.”

We’ll be the judges of that!

As far as we’re aware, there’s nothing simple about “memory pills” at all – there are only a handful of products on the market right now that can realistically help with memory function.

The product is described as a “dynamic neural activator”. Sounds very impressive!

Covaxil have also gone ahead and given their formula its own special name: Reaxin-517.

We hate it when manufacturers do this.

There is no reason why they should give their formula a name that sounds vaguely pharmaceutical – except of course to trick gullible people into thinking the product is something that it isn’t.

Reaxin-517 sounds like a research chemical.

NuraDyne is a natural nootropic stack.

Presenting it as something else is downright dishonest.

Almost as dishonest as this:

 

Dishonest marketing claims

 

As we explain in this article, there IS NO SUCH THING as a pill that makes you smarter.

There is no real life Limitless pill.

Anyone telling you otherwise is a scam artist. 

Plain and simple.

But we can’t just write it off there. Covaxil might have gotten a little carried away with the marketing. It happens. We really need to take a closer look at this stack to see if it is any good or not.

Does NuraDyne do all of the things it says it can?

Is it safe? What are the main side effect risks?

How does Covaxil NuraDyne compare to the best brain supplements around today?

In our comprehensive NuraDyne review below, we answer all of these questions and more. We examine the ingredients to see if they can really deliver all of the benefits promised by Covaxil. We discuss the major health risks. We also talk value for money. If you finish the review and have any questions, please post them in the comments section and we’ll get right back to you.

 


Covaxil NuraDyne Formula – What Is Reaxin-517?

Most of you are probably wondering what Reaxin-517 is. Let’s take a look at the NuraDyne ingredients to find out:

 

Ingredients list

 

That’s not what we wanted to see!

It seems that Reaxin-517 is just a proprietary blend full of common natural nootropics, fruit extracts, and stimulants. 

There’s absolutely nothing ‘pharmaceutical’ about this stack.

The name ‘Reaxin-517’ is a total gimmick designed to drum up easy sales from gullible people. It’s a cheap tactic to make the product look like something special, when in fact it is just a cheap proprietary blend full of bogus, ineffective ingredients and obvious ‘fillers’. 

Needless to say, we’re disappointed. 

 

Proprietary Blend

We’ve explained why you shouldn’t waste your money on proprietary blends many times before.

We therefore don’t feel the need to go into it in too much detail here.

We will, however, just give you a quick run down of the main reasons you shouldn’t use them:

  1. Other manufacturers don’t use them and nobody steals their formulas, they make millions of dollars, and stay in business for years
  2. If they can do it, everyone can
  3. There is therefore no legitimate reason to use proprietary blends
  4. When a manufacturer does use them, they are either naive, stupid, or up to no good
  5. If the reason is naivety, we shouldn’t use them because transparency and certainty with doses are inherently valuable
  6. If it’s malice, we shouldn’t use them because we’re just being ripped off

It should be pretty obvious to you that most of the time, the reason why manufacturers use prop blends is to hide the fact that their formulas are garbage.

9 times out of 10, they’ve stuffed their formula full of inert fillers and they don’t want the customer to know.

There might be some instances where a manufacturer genuinely believes someone will steal their formula if they reveal doses on the label. But their stupidity isn’t our problem. Other manufacturers offer total transparency, so we’ll go with them!

 

Bogus Ingredients

All proprietary blends are bad, but they’re not all as bad as each other.

The NuraDyne proprietary blend is particularly bad because it contains so many useless, unproven, dud ingredients!

Just look at that ingredient list: melon juice, cinnamon bark, elm bark, cola extract…all of them useless!

This looks more like a cake recipe than a nootropic stack!

 

Cinnamon bark extract

 

None of those ingredients have ever been shown to bring about cognitive enhancements.

You will not find a single clinical trial which shows any of these ingredients to have nootropic properties of any kind.

They don’t increase focus.

They don’t improve memory function.

They don’t reduce fatigue.

They don’t do ANYTHING.

And to make matters worse, we have no idea how much of these ingredients we get in each serving of Covaxil NuraDyne. 

For all we know, 99% of the blend could be cinnamon bark.

99% could feasibly be powdered melon juice.

There could just as easily be almost no melon juice in this stack.

But then we have to wonder: since it has no nootropic properties, why would Covaxil include something like melon juice unless they were using it as a filler?

We think it’s obvious that these ingredients have been added for a reason, and that reason sure as hell isn’t their ability to enhance cognition.

Not good enough.

 

-How Does Cholesterol Reduce Cognitive Function?-

 


NuraDyne Side Effects – What Are The Risks?

We wouldn’t recommend this product to any of our readers in part due to the terrible value for money it offers, and in part because of the considerable side effect concerns.

There are two sources of caffeine in this blend.

These are coffee bean extract and guarana extract.

There is nothing special or different about the caffeine you get from coffee and the caffeine you get from guarana. Caffeine is caffeine. Guarana seeds contain more caffeine than coffee beans on a gram for gram basis. But when we’re dealing with extracts – as opposed to eating the fruit – that is COMPLETELY IRRELEVANT.

We have no idea how either one is dosed, how potent the extracts are (i.e how much caffeine we get per milligram of extract), or if the extracts even contain any caffeine at all!

For all we know, the coffee bean and guarana extracts might be plant matter extracts – they might have had all of the caffeine isolated and removed (which is why we prefer stacks that use straight up caffeine anhydrous).

Just as easily though, the extracts might be almost completely caffeine, and their combined doses might be as much as 530mg. 

Covaxil wouldn’t be the first company to over-use caffeine to get results. Many products stuff their prop blends full of caffeine. Users get a serious energy kick and assume that the actual nootropic ingredients are doing their job. But in reality, there are hardly any of those ingredients present – they’re just getting an energy boost they could get much cheaper by making a pot of coffee!

Caffeine should be taken very seriously.

It is an immensely powerful stimulant.

Acute caffeine overdoses can be fatal.

Even low doses of caffeine can cause side effects.

Here are some of the common side effects of caffeine consumption:

  • Anxiety
  • Hypertension
  • Sweating
  • Jitters
  • Irritability
  • Dizziness
  • Inability to focus
  • Energy crashes
  • Headaches
  • Insomnia

It is absolutely vital that you consider your existing daily caffeine consumption before you decide to add in more through supplementation. 

We have no idea how much caffeine is in NuraDyne, but there could feasibly be as much as 500mg.

That is going to be far too much for the vast majority of users.

At that dose, side effects are inevitable, even if you think you do have a high tolerance. 

There could be much less than 500mg of course, but we have no way of knowing for sure. We need to consider the worst case scenario; in this case, that’s pretty damn bad.

We wish we didn’t have to speculate like this. We wish Covaxil would give us the full formula specs. But sadly, they’ve chosen to go down the other route, and we’re left to make guesses.

Caution

We aren’t doctors.

This is not medical advice.

We don’t know you, your medical history, or anything else about you which might affect how dangerous a nootropic is for you. 

You need to do your own research, come to your own conclusions, and then talk to a qualified health professional before you use this supplement. Don’t gamble with your health; talk to a physician before you do anything!

 


Conclusion – Should You Use Covaxil NuraDyne?

We don’t thin it’s too unfair to call this product an out and out scam.

Covaxil have simply thrown together some bogus fruit extracts and some nootropics (probably in tiny amounts) into a proprietary blend. They called it Reaxin-517 to make it sound “science-y”, and then started making very bold claims about what it is capable of.

In reality, this stack is a total rip-off. For all we know, it could be 90% melon juice powder. Considering melon juice has no nootropic properties whatsoever, we can’t think of any other reason why it would be here other than as a filler.

On top of that, we have serious concerns about the caffeine dosing – there could be as much as 500mg of caffeine in each serving of NuraDyne. We don’t need to tell you why that is dangerous.

All in all, a pretty terrible nootropic.

We would advise all of our readers to opt for a more transparent, focused, high quality stack if they want to see real results.

 

The post Covaxil NuraDyne Review – What A Scam! appeared first on Natural Nootropic.


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