This was posted 8 years 3 months 16 days ago, and might be an out-dated deal.

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Swisse WPI 86.5% Pure Warrior Powered Extreme Burn Chocolate 2kg $59.99 @ Chemist Warehouse

50
FS7824

Good Price for a brand like Swisse. Footy Final Sale

Pure Warrior Powered by Swisse™ Extreme Burn Chocolate or Vanilla 2kg. Retail for $151.99 on swisse website

General Information

28g PROTEIN PER SERVE
1.8g FAT PER SERVE
2.0g SUGAR PER SERVE
12.8g ESSENTIAL AMINO ACIDS PER SERVE
6.1g BRANCHED CHAIN AMINO ACIDS PER SERVE
50 SERVES PER PACK

Extreme Burn Protein Blend (Whey Protein Concentrate and Whey Protein Isolate [86.5%])
Chocolate Flavour (5%)
Cacao Powder (5%)
Green Coffee Bean Extract (2%)
Inulin (0.8%)
Xanthan Gum (0.5%)
Sucralose (0.1%)
Silicon Dioxide (0.1%).

More info on swisse website

Free shipping with FS7824 code

Related Stores

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Chemist Warehouse

closed Comments

  • +1

    Pure Warrior Powered Extreme Burn

    R U OK?

    • +3

      You need to ask this of the person who is paying $152 for 2kg of WPI protein.

  • How does it compare to ON?

    • At this price it is about the price same as ON

      The ingredients look good to me, I would consider switching and supporting an Australian product, if it wasn't so overpriced normally.

      https://m.reddit.com/r/Fitness/comments/uva9t/big_reddit_pro…

      ON is the benchmark, would be interesting to see the swisse one tested like this

      • Thanks. The ON is around $90 for 2 kg at Costco. Slightly more compared to this. I like the taste and the fact it dissolves so easily in the milk. If this one is on par, that will be awesome. Wish there was a smaller sample to taste.

  • Pricey skim milk powder from a company whose 'independent laboratories' are in the family and whose health claims are dubious at best.

    • The entire supplement/vitamin industry is poorly regulated. The are probably no worse than their competitors.

    • And would "troll cooment" instead be the light version of your paragraph that wasted our time?

      • You're in Ozbargain. The amount of time you 'wasted' rather pales in comparison to the price you appear to be able to pay to a renowned purveyor of products to give you the most nutritious and expensive urine in your 'hood.
        Good luck with the acne.

        • +1

          Gees… Get off the roids dude.

        • WTF? Its 86% WPC and WPI, alone worth around $20-$30/kg. Others say the ingredients look good. This is no skim milk powder, although they do exist and are definately worth bagging out.

        • @chyawala: "Worth" is what the site is about. You have just told me it is not skim milk powder, but skimmed skim milk powder, with any traces of lipid or carbohydrate further reduced with the affect of allowing the protein to be digested slightly quicker.
          Were the user to be utilising such rapid digestion in order to re-build protein damaged during vigorous exercise, construct new tissue in response to such, or replace the combination protein-sugar complexes 'glycoproteins used in signalling or transport, the net benefit would be comparable to starting off in second gear at the lights when leaving Melbourne for a trip to Canberra rather than first.
          If the argument is that the amino acids [if you are having protein enter your blood via the digestive tract, you don't need a doctor, you need a coroner] can be used for energy,it's worth bearing in mind that not only will this lead to a bigger load on the kidneys due to the extra nitrogenous load they have to filter, but any surplus will be then deposited as fat or converted to sugar.
          The only people tauting the benefits of these 'superfoods' are the ones selling them. The company here may even offer 'laboratory tests' to show' the effects. They may even offer 'peer-reviewed' articles - the catch being that the 'peers' are other sale and marketing staff. the again, what would I know, I'm only a biologist. That's why I don't do droids' ms - I wouldn't want the resultant acne :-p

        • @terrys:
          Dude sorry I'm not sure anyone here is with you on this. No-one is making anyone consume excess protein. WPC in fact has many valuable fats including the phospholipid PS. In fact whey protein is a food with extensive scientific evidence of very beneficial health effects.

        • @chyawala: "In fact whey protein is a food"
          Quite. Enjoy your milk powder.

        • @terrys:
          Not to split hairs but when you make cheese it also makes whey.

        • @chyawala: Yep. This stuff is being sold as a somehow 'superior' food on the basis that is is milk - with things taken out. Forgive me for being slightly suspicious at the suggestion that whatever company making it has come up with a superior means of gaining advantage any sustenance from milk over and above that provided by ~ 3.5 billion years of evolution topped by a few million years of mammalian evolution.
          I view it with the same cynicism as I do as a claim that seperating vitamins from all their cognate nutrients, lipids and fibre and compressing them in small pills and capsules is " Nature's way" - and that those who make the claims are the true bearers and copywrite holders of the term "Ethical".
          There are certainly groups that gain advantage from modifications - the ketatogenic diet is of great assistance in some cases of childhood epilepsy that is none responsive to drugs.
          Some of the feedback may be do to some people imagining I am suggesting that people are somehow 'stupid' for buying this product. That's not the case - even were it totally useless, placebo affect alone could make it at least at much value as [say] a garmin or fit-bit tracker. Neither of those move your muscles for you, or get you out of the door, but once you have bought one,it's not like a gym membership you can defer because it is `outside', the unit is their with you [ and often a partner who would tend to suggest that you do justify the purchase].
          It is expensive - it costs to produce, and the methods of production cost a lot to research. I am supportive of that, as there are groups who benefit. I would merely point out, as an Ozbargainer and a biologist that the majority of the claims made for such products are pretty much marketing bumph, and this one particularly drew my eye as the corporation selling them has a history of having to modifying their claims following altercations with the TGA, and their chief 'independent reseacher' happens to be the owners dad.

        • @terrys:

          So does drinking milk give enough proteins if you lift weights?

        • @ms: Who do you know who drinks only milk? As part of a balanced diet, it can help. I'm not aware of a case where any food is made more nutritious by taking nutrients out tho.
          I can see the attraction for some sports such as weightlifting, where an enterprising or convinced sales rep could make the case that the sugars and fats are removed as these are more isotonic rather than aerobic - but you'd still be powering through the ATP.
          MPC isn't produced for its health benefits. It has many useful physical properties that make it useful for manufactured food, such as Kraft's [tosses salt over shoulder]Velveeta, a product they now have to call 'Pasteurized Prepared Cheese Product' - and more important for Australia, it does not attract tariff rate quotas like other milk products.
          My preference when I was tossing hay bales and hunting was beef - preferably shown a flame at some stage after removal. If I was indulging in strenuous exercise, I'd also be tossing mushrooms and parsley into the mix.
          As a 'quick' feed, about the only advantage I'd see to these powders would be the taste, the lower sugar content and the easy solubility. As I would also be hoping my bones would be increasing in density in sync with any increase/restoration of muscle mass, I'd also be wary of anything with no fat in winter, as I'd like to know there was some vehicle for assimilating and transporting vitamin D.
          A good rule of thumb I have heard is that if your grandmother wouldn't have recognised it as food, it probably isn't. Then again, my mine only saw what was available in the U.K. ;-/

        • @terrys:

          Who do you know who drinks only milk? As part of a balanced diet, it can help

          Yep correct. I do drink milk apart from eating regular food.

          My question was more towards obtaining of protein in case someone does weight training.

  • Does this stack well with slug pumper 100

  • +1

    title shouldn't be WPI if it's a "special blend" of wpc+wpi. could be 86% wpc.

  • is this amino acid or protein product?

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