community
Community Guidelines
Last updated 6/17/2026
Our community is a crowdsourced research journal, not a forum. Every post is structured data: molecule, form, dose, duration, goal, outcome, side effects. Narrative is welcome but it rides on top of the structured fields.
Trust tiers
New members post from the Sandbox tier; their posts are visible but cannot contain outbound links. Contributors, Verified (uploaded COA or bloodwork), Trusted Reporters, and Medical Reviewers progressively unlock more features and weight in consensus scoring.
What gets moderated
Vendor promotion, spam, misinformation about drug safety, sourcing discussions outside our member-gated area, and off-topic content. An AI content filter runs on every submission before a human sees it.
Sharing your experience
Anyone can read the community. To post a first-hand experience you verify your email with a one-time sign-in link — this keeps accounts real and accountable. Your email is never shown publicly; only the display name you choose appears with your post.
When you share, pick the peptide(s) you actually used and describe what happened: the dose, how long you used it, your goal, the result, and any side effects. Be specific and honest. Vague or exaggerated posts help no one and may be removed.
What is not allowed in experiences
- Vendor promotion, discount codes, or "DM me for a source" — sourcing talk stays out of public posts.
- Links of any kind in the body of a post (the form blocks them).
- Dangerous dosing presented as instruction, or claims that a peptide cures or treats a disease.
- Other people’s stories posted as your own, impersonation, or any content involving minors.
- Personal or contact information — yours or anyone else’s.
How experiences are moderated
Every experience is submitted as pending and reviewed by a human before it appears anywhere on the site, including individual peptide pages. We may edit lightly for clarity, or remove posts that break these rules. Experiences are personal anecdotes — not medical advice and not clinical evidence — and should be read that way.