Research Purposes Only: The compounds discussed on this site (BPC-157, TB-500) are explicitly for laboratory research use only. They are not FDA-approved for human consumption, medical treatment, or dietary supplementation. The information provided is for educational and harm-reduction purposes and does not constitute medical advice.

Wolverine Stack

Buying safely: assume the market is hostile

If a vendor makes it feel frictionless, that is not automatically a feature. In gray markets, convenience often means your due diligence has been outsourced to fantasy.

Medical Review By

Dr. Igor Bussel, MD, MS, MHA

Medical Reviewer

Last Updated

March 2026

Buyer checklist

  • Look for batch-specific third-party testing, not a recycled PDF with no lot traceability.
  • Check whether the seller identifies the testing lab, date, batch number, and purity method.
  • Verify that site claims match what the COA actually says.
  • Be suspicious of miracle language, deep discount countdowns, and unsupported “pharma grade” claims.

COA and third-party testing

Independent testing matters because the biggest real-world danger may be bad product rather than disappointing efficacy. Expert Opinion A decent COA should support identity and purity claims, but it should still be viewed as one input in a broader trust analysis.

Scam patterns

  • Payment methods that remove chargeback protection
  • Vendor addresses that lead to mail drops or empty storefronts
  • Reviews that read like copied marketing copy rather than messy human language
  • Static lab reports reused across months or across multiple products

Chargeback risk

A site pushing irreversible payments is telling you something important: if the product never arrives, is fake, or creates a dispute, they want the exit ramp, not you. Expert Opinion

Also read cost, safety, and legacy buyer safety page.