So I've searched through these forums and the internet in general on whether or not phenylpiracetam is effective. No matter where I look their seems to be VERY mixed reviews. Pretty much everyone has a strong opinion about it but the opinion is always either, "It works wonders!" or "It does nothing"... I know their was an issue with one of the major Phenylpiracetam producing labs having off-white product that some suggested was impure, but I doubt that all the Phenylpiracetam haters got theirs from that particular batch.
So my question is do you think Phenylpiracetam is highly effective for some people and simply doesn't effect others? If you've taken it before please provide details as to how much you took, for how long, and whether or not it was effective.
Thanks!
Here is another discussion on this drug.
I deal with Phenylpiracetam for about 7 years and have a lot of friends who tried it.
And I am pretty sure that:
1) It really has pronounced stimulatory effect on some people.
2) Some people definitely have zero stimulatory action when taking phenylpiracetam. For them it works like usual piracetam.
3) Discussion about supplier is really boring and it often starts for the drugs with 'partial efficacy' profile.
In my country we get phenylpiracetam from official pharmacies and even in this case a lot of people trying to find 'absolutely original' phenylpiracetam which should work for them.
"It works wonders!"
At least that is my opinion.
While you're at it, check out my major overhaul of its wikipedia article today: https://en.wikipedia...Phenylpiracetam
Edit: Hope this doesn't cause as much of a stir as the NSI-189 article... haha
Great upgrade for the wiki article. Thank you.
Just now had a discussion on phenylpiracetam on some russian forums. Had a dispute if phenylpiracetam metabolites are amphetamine-like or not.
And it seems that they are not.
Btw, drug seems to be smth like very delicate catecholamine release agent. So its properties for releasing neurotransmitters are pretty unusual and its stimulant activity may depend of cells' state.