Max Muscle Xtreme and Max Test Ultra Review
By: Rob MillerFact Checked On: 3-24-2020
Contents
Celebrity EndorsementsTesting
The Author’s Results
Max Muscle Xtreme
Where to Buy Max Muscle Xtreme
Max Test Ultra
Where to Buy Max Test Ultra
How To Cancel
The Bottom Line
User Reviews
I was alerted to another very persuasive article the other day.
This time, a visitor to the website wrote in all excited about this incredible new supplement stack that Dwayne Johnson (aka The Rock) uses to get in shape for his movies. It’s Max Muscle Xtreme and Max Test Ultra, and he asked that I check it out and let him know if it’s legit or just more marketing bullshit.
Well, I’m sorry to report… it’s total bullshit.
We’vecome acrossarticles like this many times before, so they’re pretty easy to spot at this point.
But since many of you are just seeing itfor the first time, I’ll break it down so you’re not left with any doubt about the fact that Max Muscle Xtreme and Max Test Ultra is just a scam.
Let’s start right at hte top with the header section of the website and the title of the article that probably brought you here.
I’ve circled and underlined a few key things to point out:
- Notice the name of the website.
They want you to think you’re reading an article in Men’s Health Magazine, so they use the same font and color scheme as the real thing, but they add the word “Life” in light gray so as not to actually infringe on any copyrights. You’re not reading Men’s Health; you’re reading Men’s Health Life – a completely different thing. - Then there’s a very important word – Advertorial. WTF is an advertorial?
It’s actually a made up word for a fake article that’s meant to look like an editorial, but is really an advertisement.
Notice they put that word in light gray too – apparently hoping you won’t notice. - Now look at the address bar for the website.
The address for Men’s Health Magazine is www.menshealth.com.
This “www.menshealthadvice365.com” is something completely different. - You’ll have to trust me on this one, unless you go check it out yourself, but the links: FITNESS, SEX&LOVE, FOOD, etc aren’t really links. They don’t go anywhere.
They’re just put there to make it look more like a real online magazine. - The title of the “advertorial” “’Legal Steroid’ Producing Massive Muscle Gains” is very well crafted to get your attention, especially if you just did an internet search looking for supplements to help you gain muscle mass, which is how they find most of their potential customers.
Max Muscle Xtreme and Max Test Ultra Celebrity Endorsements
The most common questions I get about these articles are all about the celebrity endorsements.
People want to know if these guys really use this stuff, and if not, why are they letting some random company use their image?
I gotta admit, they’re good questions, and the answers, at least to the second question, are a little weak.
The answer to the first question – do they use Max Muscle Xtreme and Max Test Ultra – is a big NO.
Look at the actual text to see how they make you think they use it, without actually saying they do:
This should be common sense but it needs to be stated because people still fall for antics like this and they need to know what to look out for to avoid falling for it again in the future.
See, they never actually say that Tom Hardy, or Chris Hemsworth, or Gerard Butler, or any of them actually use Max Muscle Xtreme and Max Test Ultra.
They just dance around it making you think they do.
Notice they say celebrities use “Supplements Like Max Muscle Xtreme and Max Test Ultra” not that they use these actual supplements.
Most articles are not advertisements, so that alone and the language that they use should be a dead giveaway that something is afoot before you even dig further.
Okay so the article is really an advertisement, and it’s really pushing a product more than revealing a big bodybuilding breakthrough. So what, right? Companies advertise their products. What’s wrong with that?
Nothing at all is wrong with advertising your product.
But let’s move on through the article, and you’ll see that what they say about the actual products, Max Muscle Xtreme and Max Test Ultra, isn’t even correct information.It’s almost like they’re not even really talking about these products at all, and truthfully, that’s because they aren’t.
Testing Max Muscle Xtreme and Max Test Ultra
The article goes on to talk about how the author decided to try this amazing new stack for himself and write about his results.
When he discusses how he chose Max Muscle Xtreme and Max Test Ultra, here’s what he says Max Muscle Xtreme does:
These benefits sound like they’d come from a testosterone booster or an fat burner, or a combination of the two.
But if you go the the actual Max Muscle Xtreme website, you find out it’s a nitric oxide booster.
And while it’s true that boosting NO will improve your workouts, it doesn’t reduce puffiness or increase protein synthesis. But the biggest issue with this listis that itdoesn’t even mention a nitric oxide boost at all.Why would they leave out the most important aspect of the supplement they’re advertising?
The discrepancy is even bigger when it comes to Max Test Ultra.
The official website claims it’s a post workout supplement to improve recovery, but that’s not even mentioned at all in the benefits listed in the article:
Here’s why this matters. This exact same article has been used to promote dozens and dozens of supplement stacks over the past few years.
The article was written once, and every few months, they just change out the products, putting in whatever they’re pushing at the time.
That’s why the benefits in the article don’t match the benefits on the product websites.
Max Muscle Xtreme
The official product website is where we get our information about Max Muscle Xtreme, and basically it’s a pre workout supplement focuses on increasing the amount of nitric oxide in your body.
NO is a vasodilator; it opens up and widens your blood vessels to allow an increased amount of blood to flow through to your muscles.
This means better oxygen and nutrient delivery, which means increased endurance and strength during workouts, and improved muscle repair after workouts.
They don’t provide a complete ingredient list, but the highlights are:
- L-Arginine which is a precursor to nitric oxide, so increasing L-Argninine increases nitric oxide.
- Citrulline Mallate which is a precursor to L-Arginine, so it also increases nitric oxide, but since it takes a few steps to get there, it delays the increase.
Combining L-Arginine with Citrulline Mallate provides a long lasting nitric oxide boost. - Pure NO Super Molecule which is really just more L-Arginine, perhaps in a slightly different form.
As a pre workout formula, you take 2 Max Muscle Xtreme capsules about half an hour before working out, and fyi, the website recommends a healthy diet and workout routine to get the best resuts.
So Max Muscle Xtreme looks like it may be a somewhat effective nitric oxide booster, so if it’s offered at a good price, it may be worth a try.
Where to Buy Max Muscle Xtreme
The only way to purchase Max Muscle Xtreme is through a free trial offer at the website (which the fake article links to).
But watch out because the free trial is really just a scam.
You pay only a small shipping fee and they send you a full one-month supply. The moment you place your order, your 14-day trial period begins.If you don’t contact Max Muscle Xtreme to cancel within that 14 day trial period, they’ll charge you the full price of $89.95 for the “free” bottle and sign you up for monthly shipments at that same price each month.
Most guys who order these free trials (and Max Muscle Xtreme isn’t the only one) have no idea they’re signing up for anything more than a free trial for the initial cost of shipping.They are completely blindsided when they get their first charge on their account, and they’re livid when they get the next one a month later.
Max Muscle Xtreme does explain the program, but it’s buried in the fine print of the Terms and Conditions, which very few people read thoroughly, and they know that.
What they do is shady and deceitful, but unfortunately it’s not illegal.
Max Test Ultra
The official Max Test Ultra website calls it the Ultimate Recovery Matrix, saying it improves post workout recovery time, replenishes lost energy, and builds more muscle mass.
They also don’t provide a complete ingredient list, but hit on a few key highlights:
- Tribulus Terrestris which is thought to help increase your body’s natural production of testosterone, leading to increase muscle building and libido.
- D-Aspartic Acid which is also a testosterone booster that’s been demonstrated clinically to increase levels.
- ZMA (Zinc as Monomethionine and Aspartate and Vitamin B-6) which is thought to be crucial to the natural testosterone production process.
These key ingredients would definitely point toward Max Test Ultra being a testosterone booster rather than a post workout supplement, but the website later goes on to briefly mention a few other ingredients in passing:
- Beta Alanine which decreases the buildup of lactic acid so your muscles don’t get sore and tired during tough workouts.
- L-Arginine for an increase in Nitric Oxide.
- Taurine, Caffeine, and Green Tea for energy and antioxidant protection.
- Amino Acids for post workout recovery.
Really the most important thing for post workout recovery is Branched Chain Amino Acids, and there’s no mention of these anywhere in relation to Max Test Ultra.
For that reason, I wouldn’t recommend it as a post workout, even if you could get a good deal.
Where to Buy Max Test Ultra
Just like Max Muscle Xtreme, Max Test Ultra is only sold through its official website and only by signing up for the free trial.
This one is also a scam, with identical terms to the ones for Max Muscle Xtreme.
You won’t be getting anything for free unless you contact them and cancel within 14 days of the day you ordered.
How To Cancel Max Muscle Xtreme and Max Test Ultra
You may be reading this because you’ve already been scammed and you’re trying to figure out how best to handle it.
The first thing you need to do is contact them and get yourself off their automatic shipping.
For both products, the listed phone number is 1-877-669-0503 and the email address is support@xtrememusclefuel.They say email is a better way to contact them.
They may require you to return the products and they may not.
This seems to change from product to product, and sometimes it depends on which customer service rep you get.
The Bottom Line
Your first introduction to Max Muscle Xtreme and Max Test Ultra was probably the very impressive “article” about how this stuff is taking the celebrity workout world by storm, and how you can try it yourself for free.
I don’t blame you for getting sucked in.
They know guys will get sucked in – that’s why they do it, and they make a lot of money doing it.
These supplement scams aren’t going anywhere.
This article will keep popping up, but with different stacks every other week or month or so.
As long as they do, we’ll be here trying to expose them for the scams they are.
Max Muscle Xtreme and Max Test Ultra are a scam, plain and simple.
The article is a fake, the supplements are generic – using smatterings of decent ingredients just enough to say they’re in there.
Don’t fall for it, and if you already have, call or email to cancel right away, so they don’t take any more of your time, money, or frustration.
Have You Used Max Muscle Xtreme and Max Test Ultra?
Leave Your Review Below!
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User Reviews
Have you used this supplement?
Peter
Max Muscle Xtreme and Max Test Ultra are a TOTAL SCAM. DO NOT FALL FOR THIS UNETHICAL SCAM!!! I got suckered in and ordered 1 'trial' bottle of 'Max Muscle Xtreme'. These crooks phoned incessantly trying to convince me to also order a companion 'trial' bottle of 'Max Test Ultra'. I vehemently responded "NO!' ......... but they shipped it anyway. They shipped both bottles together (in one package) and then charged me for 2 'shipping & handling'. My 'trial' bottle was ordered April 27 & I received it on May 8 - - 11 days after ordering, leaving basically no time to try the 'junk' before my 14 days was up. If I hadn't cancelled immediately, these crooks would have started charging me some $90 per month for each product. I immediately realized that this was a totally unethical SCAM. Here's the bottom line. 1. I ordered a 14 day 'trial' for 1 product, 'Max Muscle Xtreme' ..... to be delivered in 3 to 4 days ..... it took 11 days to receive delivery. 2. I agreed to $4.95 for shipping & handling the one product. 3.They shipped me a 2nd product, 'Max Test Ultra' that I had repeatedly refused to order in spite of their many calls. 4. They charged me an additional S&H for a product I did not want and did not order. 5. I phoned to cancel my involvement immediately. 6. I received an email with return instructions: I had to pay return shipping including for the product that I did not order. 7. I said I would not pay for return shipping for either the 'trial' product or for a 2nd product that I did not order and did not want. 8.They said I could keep the products for about $19/$20 each if I didn't want to return them. I told them that I wanted absolutely nothing to do with them and would not pay them 1 more cent. 9. I will be returning the unwanted products tomorrow and will pay the postage just so I can get rid of these crooks once and for all. SUMMARY: THIS IS DEFINITELY A SCAM! I HAVE NOW READ BACKGROUND AND IT IS DOUBTFUL THAT THE STUFF IS SAFE - check out the side affects. BEWARE AND DO NOT GET CAUGHT IN THIS SCAM!!!! I wish I had read Ron Miller's SupplementCritique before I got involved with these crooks!
16 out of 17 people found this review helpful.
Max Test Xtreme Scam
this product nearly killed me, it gave me heart palpitations, and I only took it twice.
11 out of 12 people found this review helpful.
Maurice's Review
I got scammed by Max Labs. I ordered their max test ultra. They say I got spammed by the website I was on and it ordered 2 other different orders at the same time. So I cancelled them. I've never received the original order so I thought it got cancelled too. My surprise when I got charged the US$89.95 from the " Exclusive Canadian Residents " website. When I emailed them they refused to credit me for the full amount !
13 out of 16 people found this review helpful.
Aurele's Review
Don’t fall for a free sample, even if you cancel you will be charged. All they want is to get hold of your credit card number. Forget about this outfit.
Don't buy it
I have tried the product. It is not just useless but dangerous for one's health. I suggest people not to buy it in order to remain healthy.
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Ask A Question
User Questions and Answers
Is this product steriods or just mix of anything -Jordan
They're not steroids. They're made of natural ingredients.- Rob
3 out of 5 people found this question helpful.
Please cancel my monthly order. Or I'll call my creditors and stop payment -Harry
We only review supplements. You will need to contact the company you made the purchase from.- Rob
1 out of 1 people found this question helpful.
What are the recommended daily dosages -Gerald
They don't say, but most supplements similar to these instruct that you take 2 pills each, once a day.- Rob
1 out of 2 people found this question helpful.
I want to stop the shipment your product on my home. Stop that now, and stop this account. I dont authorise you to take the money
On my credit card. -Serge desrochers
SupplementCritique.com is a review website. We have no affiliation with either of these products. You'll have to contact the company you purchased from to cancel your order.- Rob
1 out of 2 people found this question helpful.
When do I take my testerone booster and when should I take the fat burner ? If i use them both the same day -Carlos
They don't specify, but my recommendation is that you take the fat burner/pre workout in the morning and the testosterone booster at night.- Rob
Can u take max muscle if u have erection problems -Dahir ali
Yes, there's nothing to negatively affect erectile dysfunction. In fact, some of the ingredients could improve the situation.- Rob
Can i take this once a day? -Dale
It's best to take it them as directed. Follow the instructions on the bottle for best results.- Rob
Hello, I would like your permission to return products that have not been opened, in the name of Alain Paradis, because his doctor has forbidden him to take them because of health problems. Thank you! -Alain Paradis - 514 717-0002
SupplementCritique.com is a review website. We don't sell or have any affiliation with the products you purchased. You'll need to contact them directly.- Rob
My Question is this. Do these 2 items work at all or are they a waste of time and money? Max 2.0 and max ultra?
-Joe
Supplement stacks advertised in what looks like an article talking about this incredible new steroid alternative, and offer "free" trials that aren't really free generally don't work very well, and are definitely NOT worth the money they cost month after month once the trial is over.- Rob
2 out of 5 people found this question helpful.
I can't remember when to take Max test extreme and when to take max gain extreme. One was in morning and one was at night? -Garr
I haven't reviewed those two supplements yet. Check the bottles for instructions.- Rob
2 out of 5 people found this question helpful.
I have already max muscle extreme and the other one so should I start to use them and does thy are useful and is there is any side effects?.. I am already called them and cancel but still have the product
Thanks -Maged
I don't think they're unsafe, just not particularly effective, so you can go ahead and use them since you have them.- Rob
1 out of 4 people found this question helpful.
Ces deux produits sont une arnaque, je les éviterais à tout prix. Si vous recherchez quelque chose qui aide efficacement à développer la masse musculaire maigre et à perdre du poids, consultez un supplément appelé Testofuel.
J’ai en fait un compte rendu en français, consultez-le ici: https://www.supplementcritique.com/fr/reel-commentaire-testofuel-je-lai-effectivement- utilisez-mise-a-jour-2018/
et voici leur site – https://www.testofuel.com/fr/?a_aid=5068490ae1aa6&a_bid=d39758f5
J’espère que cela aide et laissez-moi savoir si vous avez des questions!
We didn’t steal your money. We simply reviewed Max Muscle Xtreme and Max Test Ultra, we don’t sell it.
If you want to get in touch with them regarding your order, the phone number they list is 1-877-669-0503. Hope this helps and let me know if you have any questions.
SupplementCritique.com is a review website. We don’t sell products and we have no affiliation with Max Muscle Xtreme or Max Test Ultra.
In fact, if you read the review, you’ll see we recommend against it for the precise reason you’re up against now. You’ll need to contact them directly.
The phone number they list is 1-877-669-0503.
Visa is conducting a dispute on the file and RCMP have been notified.
Scam for sure
JUST TO CONTACT THE CONSUMERS SERVICES AND THEY WILL EXPLAINE TO YOU THE PROCEDURE TO FOLLOW. GOOD LOCK
SupplementCritique.com is a review website. We don’t have any affiliation with this product, so you’ll have to contact the company you made your purchase from to cancel your order or billing.
Rob
SupplementCritique.com
I looked it up and came across this site and realized its a monthly trial and i would get billed again. I tried to contact them by phone, a rep answered and the line dropped, called again and a answering machine told me that the person that i was trying to contact mail box is full and to call back later.
So i contacted my bank right away to cancel the credit card and give me a new one (new credit card number) to avoid future billing from them and i was able to contact them by e-mail and canceled the order.
It did not work
SupplementCritique.com is a review website. We don’t have any affiliation with this product, so you’ll have to contact the company you made your purchase from to cancel your order or billing.
Rob
SupplementCritique.com