Bucked Up | Creatine | 50 Servings
SKU: 81650244024

Bucked Up | Creatine | 50 Servings

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Description

Bucked Up | Creatine | 50 Servings5g micronized creatine monohydrate. Nothing hidden, nothing wasted. Bucked Up Creatine Monohydrate keeps it simple with one ingredient that's backed by years of research: creatine monohydrate. No extras, no weak add ons, no hidden blends. One scoop gives you 5g of micronized creatine monohydrate, right in the sweet spot for building up creatine in your muscles and helping with high intensity efforts. Here's how it works: creatine boosts the

5g micronized creatine monohydrate. Nothing hidden, nothing wasted.

Bucked Up Creatine Monohydrate keeps it simple with one ingredient that's backed by years of research: creatine monohydrate. No extras, no weak add-ons, no hidden blends. One scoop gives you 5g of micronized creatine monohydrate, right in the sweet spot for building up creatine in your muscles and helping with high-intensity efforts.

Here's how it works: creatine boosts the phosphocreatine system, which is your body's quick energy backup. During tough lifts, sprints, jumps, or intervals, your muscles use up ATP fast – that's adenosine triphosphate, the main energy molecule. Phosphocreatine helps remake ATP quick, so you keep going strong longer before you fade. That's why creatine helps with strength, power, sprint repeats, more reps in the gym, and building lean muscle when you train hard. The 5g dose is key – it's the standard amount to keep your muscle creatine levels high without fancy dosing tricks.

Monohydrate is the go-to form. Even with all the new versions out there, monohydrate has the most studies showing it works great. Micronized means the particles are finer, so it mixes better in water, shakes easier, and goes down smoother. That helps you stick with it, and sticking with it is what gets results.

No fancy combos here, and that's on purpose. Creatine doesn't need help to shine. That's a plus for folks who already us

Bucked Up Creatine by Bucked Up contains 5g Creatine Monohydrate (micronized), a clinical dose for strength and power output.

Key Highlights

  • 5,000mg creatine monohydrate per serving – that's the solid daily dose to keep your muscle creatine up. It's what most people need to feel those strength, power, and extra reps that creatine delivers.
  • Just one ingredient – no fillers, no skimpy extras, no mystery blends. You see exactly what's in it and can match it up with what the studies say.
  • Micronized creatine monohydrate – finer particles mix better and make it easy to use every day. Consistency is huge because creatine only kicks in if you keep at it.
  • Backed by tons of research in sports nutrition – creatine monohydrate is one of the most tested performance boosters. Years of studies show it helps with strength, power, and handling intense efforts over and over.
  • Helps remake ATP during tough workouts – creatine boosts phosphocreatine, so your body recharges energy faster in hard sets. In the gym, that means better performance when reps pile up and rests are short.
  • Great for building strength and muscle – you get better reps, more volume, and stronger adaptations over time. That's why it's a staple for power training or bulking up.
  • No stimulants – supports your workouts without caffeine or other energizers. Take it anytime – morning, before training, after, or at night – without messing up your sleep.
  • Stacks easy – with only creatine in here, it fits right in with pre-workouts, pump stuff, electrolytes, protein, intra shakes, or recovery drinks. No weird overlaps except watching your total creatine.

Bucked Up Creatine by Bucked Up contains 5g Creatine Monohydrate (micronized), a clinical dose for strength and power output.

Who Is This For?

  • Guys chasing strength gains who want a reliable daily add-in over something flashy. The 5g creatine monohydrate helps refill phosphocreatine, keeping you strong on big lifts and tough sets.
  • Bodybuilders grinding hypertrophy who want more reps, steady performance, and fuller muscles. Daily creatine supports quality volume and pulls water into muscle cells for that pumped look many notice.
  • Athletes in high-intensity stuff like football drills, sprints, fighting, or CrossFit. Creatine monohydrate is super proven for repeat sprints and quick explosive power.
  • Newbies starting with the supplement that's actually worth it. A straight 5g creatine is simple to get, easy on the gut, and straightforward to add compared to loaded pres with stims and extras.
  • Pre-workout fans who need real creatine without counting on the tiny bit in their pump or energy drink. This gives a full 5g so your intake stays steady no matter what.
  • Late-night gym rats wanting help that won't keep you up. Just creatine monohydrate here, no caffeine, so take it anytime without sleep issues.

How to Use

Grab 1 scoop for the full 5g of creatine monohydrate every day. Timing's up to you since it builds up in muscles, not a quick hit – pick when you'll remember. Training days, mix in pre or post shake; rest days, with any drink or meal. Stir into 8-16 oz water, shaker's best for smooth mixing. If creatine's new to you or your stomach's picky, start with half a scoop and build to full. No need to cycle off; it's for everyday use. Pairs great with protein, carbs, electrolytes, stim or no-stim pres, and recovery stuff. Keep it sealed in a cool, dry spot so the powder stays good.

What to Expect

First 0-10 minutes: mix and drink; no big feel since it's not a stim. 10-40 minutes: still no rush, tingles, or pump – that's normal for straight creatine. Days 1-7: if you're new or back after a break, muscle stores start building with daily use. In the first 1-2 weeks, you might notice better repeats and muscles looking a bit fuller from extra water inside the cells. Weeks 2-4: that's when it shines, with steadier sets, handling more volume, and gradual strength bumps. Over months, it adds up to better training overall.

Key Ingredients

  • Creatine Monohydrate — 5g — Clinically dosed ATP support for strength, power, and training volume

Bucked Up Creatine by Bucked Up contains 5g Creatine Monohydrate (micronized), a clinical dose for strength and power output.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much creatine is in each serving of Bucked UP Creatine Monohydrate?

Each 1-scoop serving delivers 5g of creatine monohydrate. That is the standard clinical daily maintenance dose used in sports nutrition to support elevated muscle creatine stores, strength output, and repeated high-intensity performance.

Is 5g of creatine monohydrate a clinical dose?

Yes. Daily creatine monohydrate intake in the 3-5g range is the established evidence-based maintenance range, and 5g sits at the top of that standard target. For most users, that is enough to maintain saturation with consistent daily use.

Do I need to load this creatine?

No, loading is optional. You can take 5g daily and still reach full muscle saturation over time, usually within a few weeks. A traditional loading phase can accelerate saturation, but this product works perfectly well without one if you prefer a simpler routine.

Will I feel this immediately like a pre-workout?

No. This formula contains only creatine monohydrate, so there is no caffeine, no stimulant rush, and no acute pump effect. The benefits build gradually as muscle creatine stores rise with daily use.

Can I take Bucked UP Creatine Monohydrate with my pre-workout?

Yes. In fact, that is one of the best use cases for a single-ingredient creatine product. Since this formula contains only 5g creatine monohydrate, it stacks cleanly with stim or stim-free pre-workouts without duplicating other actives.

When is the best time to take this creatine?

The best time is the time you will take it consistently every day. Pre-workout, post-workout, or with a meal all work because creatine's performance benefits come from maintaining muscle saturation, not from acute timing effects.

Is this product flavored?

This product is positioned as a pure micronized creatine monohydrate powder, and core listings commonly present it as unflavored. That makes it easy to mix into water, shakes, pre-workout, or post-workout drinks without changing your overall stack much.

Why does the serving count sometimes look inconsistent on creatine tubs?

This product is listed as 300g with a 5g serving size, which mathematically equals 60 servings, though some retail references note 50 servings. The ingredient dose itself is the important part here: each scoop is 5g creatine monohydrate. Check your label scoop size and total net weight if you want exact tub math.

Is creatine monohydrate better than fancy creatine forms?

From an evidence standpoint, creatine monohydrate remains the benchmark. It is the most studied form in human performance research and still the standard against which newer forms are judged.

Does this need to be cycled?

No. Creatine monohydrate is intended for continuous daily use, and there is no standard performance reason to cycle it. Consistency is what keeps muscle stores elevated and results noticeable.

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4.3 ★★★★★
Based on 155 reviews
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M. L. Asselin
Massapequa, US
★★★★★ 5
Who is Jesus: A Case for Jesus’ Divinity
Format: Hardcover
I thoroughly enjoyed reading Brant Pitre’s “The Case for Jesus.” The New Testament scholar’s contribution to Catholic popular literature on the identity of Jesus stands well above much of the plethora of material available to Christian readers today. Pitre (mostly) convincingly builds his case through careful, fact-based argumentation--even if one could draw different conclusions from the same evidence. What case is Pitre trying to make? In effect, he makes several cases leading up to his central point of who Jesus was and is. In the first part of this slim volume, he treats the authorship of the Gospels. In this matter, as in most of the book, his principle foil seems to be Bart Ehrman, a former Fundamentalist Christian-turned-apostate scholar whose popular works attempt to undermine the validity of the Gospels as meaningful historical documents and specifically the claim that Jesus is the Son of God. Contrary to Ehrman, Pitre argues for the traditional authorship of the Gospels. As two significant pieces of evidence, Pitre points out that even the earliest Gospel manuscripts and secondary references to the Gospels include the writers’ names by which we know them. The Gospels, then, were never really “anonymous.” This leads Pitre to challenge the scholarly consensus on the dating of the Gospels, and the more controversial hypothesis that Matthew and Luke were based in part on a hypothetical, now lost (and, as Pitre points out, never referenced) book of Jesus sayings denoted by scholars as the “Q” source. As for the so-called lost or apocryphal gospels, Pitre shows that they were never really lost, that most of them were known by early Christian writers, who regarded them as forgeries. In the case of the apocryphal gospels, then, even though the internal evidence suggests that they were written by the apostles to whom they were ascribed, the attributions were never accepted. Ehrman has argued that the apocryphal gospels were not accepted by mainstream or orthodox Christianity, but were embraced by the communities, such as the Gnostics, for whom they were written. In a way, Pitre and Ehrman aren’t in contradiction here, but they just interpret the data differently. In other words, if you accept that the Church Fathers are espousing the correct version of Christianity, then Pitre’s point stands; if you hold on to the view that the Church Fathers represented one view of Christianity among many, all to be regarded equally, then the criticism of the (orthodox) Church Fathers matters less. Pitre, while not dismissing the validity of literary criticism, argues for the historical value of the Gospels. He wants to treat the Gospels as biographies of Jesus. Their inconsistencies and apparent contradictions stem not, as Ehrman would have it, from a “telephone game”-like process of accretions and alterations over time, or even so much from the requirements of the communities for which they were written, as from the different perspectives and life experiences of their writers. Pitre notes the similarities between the Gospels and ancient Greco-Roman biographies in countering the ideas of Ehrman and before him, Rudolf Bultmann, in thinking of the Gospels as akin to folktales, fairy stories, and myths. Pitre stands for the literal truth of the Gospels as far as they will allow in part because two of the four Gospels tell us that they are true (Lk 1:1-4; Jn 19:35, 21:24-25). There’s a bit of circularity in that argument. The main case for Jesus that Pitre wants to make is for His divinity. The Gospels, as Luke Timothy Johnson and other scholars have explained, try to answer, however obliquely, the question Jesus himself poses to Peter: “But who do you say that I am?” (Mk 8:29). Pitre makes the case that the Gospels--even the synoptic Gospels--speak to Jesus’ being God. Pitre makes a lively, even entertaining, argument, using some passages, e.g., the reference to the sign of Jonah, in ways I certainly hadn’t thought of before. Even though as a Catholic I accept Jesus’ divinity, I am willing to allow that others may look at Pitre’s argument and reasonably come to different conclusions. One train of thinking might be this: Pitre notes that Jesus speaks in parables and riddles, and so His claims to divinity are indirect. Moreover, an outright and indeed blasphemous claim to His divinity might have put an even earlier end to Jesus’ three years of ministry. But the Gospel writers should not have been constrained by either Jesus’ particular application of rhetoric or his need to be circumspect; why did the Gospel writers not forthrightly declare that Jesus was God? I think the proper response to this is that Matthew, Mark, Luke and John wanted the person encountering the Gospels to answer for themselves who Jesus was and is. In other words, by transmitting the way Jesus conveyed who He was to His disciples perhaps they, too, would draw in and win over later followers of Christ. It’s much more efficacious to engage the potential convert that way than simply to assert that Jesus is God. Brad Pitre has written a wonderful and engaging book. Even if you don’t agree with all of his conclusions, you will appreciate his logical and engaging discussion. This book is meant for the general reader, although it does have a scholarly apparatus by way of careful notes. An index would have been nice but this is a short book of a couple hundred pages. If you’re on a long flight, this book would be the perfect company.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on October 28, 2016
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C. Appleyard
Grantham, US
★★★★★ 5
A wonderful book for all Christians who wish to defend the credibility of our bible
Format: Paperback
Brant Petrie is a wonderful Catholic Bible Scholar, having both a deep love and understcanding of his own faith and the faith of Jesus of Nazareth, Judaism. Everyone of his books and videos provide deeper insight who is Jesus, the ancient faith He handed on and even why it grew as swiftly as it did...always using the Old Testament to enlighten our understanding of the New. He couldn't do this if he wasn't completely convinced himself of Who Jesus is and the credibility of the Scriptures that reveal Him to us. That is what this book is about. Petrie takes you point by point through the arguments that modern scripture scholars and atheists put forth about the New Testament, that we have no idea who wrote the Gospels, they were written anonymously, they are myth or folktale etc. The most stunning reality is that these people literally ignore the facts; they ignore common sense The second topic he tackles is the assertion that Jesus wasn't divine because He never claimed to be God. They dismiss John's gospel, saying the idea that Jesus was God, was a later development and clearly not believed from the beginning as witness by the fact that no where in the Synoptic Gospels does Jesus claim divinity. Petrie, again using his understanding of Judaism and how ideas are expressed in the culture, clearly demonstrates that while, Jesus never stands up pounding his chest saying, "I am God", He very distinctly, even explicitly makes His divinity known. If He hadn't, the high priest would not have rend his garments and there would never have been a crucifixion. The case is made simply and in a straight forward manner. Arguments that all of us can use, with love, when the credibility of scripture is questioned. He also has a pleasant writing style. He has a wonderful sense of humor in his videos and while it is less obvious in the book, his gentle strength is quite evident. If you love scripture and the Christian faith, this is a book you will want to read.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 18, 2020
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Lawman
Waukegan, US
★★★★★ 5
The best "Jesus book" outside the Bible
Format: Kindle
If you are looking for a dry academic tome that spends page after page delving into the minutiae of little known biblical passages, you need to look someplace else. If, however you are looking for a fresh, dynamic and eye opening book tackling the big questions about who Jesus claimed to be, the reliability and authorship of the Gospels, and other questions surrounding the life and ministry of Jesus, then this is the book for you. Written by a well respected academic but for a non-specialist readership, Dr. Pitre's writing is engaging while not being breezy. He uses footnotes to back up his assertions but not so many as to overwhelm the reader. Don't get me wrong, I like a weighty academic tome as well as the next nerd. I would strongly recommend one of Dr. Joshua R. Brotherton's books. But nerds aren't Dr. Pitre's only intended audience. It's all of us who have been bombarded with claims that the gospels are unreliable and anonymous, written well after the lifetime of the Apostles. That Jesus never claimed to be divine or that the resurrection is nothing more than myth. It addresses these and other issues in a way that makes you resolve to buy copies of his book for family and friends even before you're halfway through the book. I know I did and I bet you will to.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 8, 2024
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Robert C.
Belleville, US
★★★★★ 5
An Excellent Summary Defending The Synoptic Gospels and Jesus Christ's Claims of Divinity
Format: Hardcover
This book is an excellent summary that refutes the arguments made by modern theologians and scholars of the Bible that claim that the Gospels were of anonymous authorship, written late in the 1st Century AD, and Jesus of Nazareth never claimed to be divine. Bart Ehrman's (an avowed atheist that seems motivated to denigrate Christianity) shoddy scholarship is frequently given as an example to be refuted. The author cites the Apostolic Fathers and more recent scholars to show that the claims made by the revisionists are incorrect. There are several detailed 5 Star reviews, so I won't duplicate their praises for Dr. Pitre's book. The book is a quick read and there are numerous end notes. A minor criticism is that the book lacks a bibliography, but the sources are fully identified within the end notes. The author makes a couple of very interesting observations concerning the Transfiguration of Jesus and how Jesus fulfilled Scripture (namely, the Book of Jonah) that I had not considered before. One of the negative reviews cites the notes in the New American Bible as evidence that Dr. Pitre's book is incorrect. While it is true that the Catholic Church in the U.S. uses the NAB translation in its liturgy, other Biblical scholars dispute the notes included in that edition of the Bible. A similar problem exists with the notes included with Oxford's Catholic Study Bible. The notes were written by modern revisionists. I suppose you have to decide whether to accept the words of the Apostolic Fathers (i.e., men that either were or knew the Apostles) and Jesus Christ, or if -- 2000 years later -- you're too sophisticated to accept the word of some ancient guys. The author is Catholic, and the book has been granted an Imprimatur. However, since this book does not get into the weeds concerning doctrinal differences, it should be of value to any Christian.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 15, 2024
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Dick
Birmingham, US
★★★★★ 4
Good but more academic
Format: Hardcover
I love Brant Pitre, especially his books Jesus and the Jewish Roots of the Eucharist and Jesus the Bridegroom. I would say those books should be required reading for anyone who is catechist or is involved in RCIA as Catholics. This book is good, however it is primarily an academic work where Dr. Pitre takes on the Historical Jesus movement and Dr. Bart Ehrman in particular. In this book he goes on to show that the gospels were written within a few decades of Jesus death by the disciples that have given their names to the gospels. He uses his knowledge of Jewish faith and culture to show that Jesus really does claim to be God in all the gospels, not just the Gospel of John. It is a good book but not one that I would find useful on a regular basis.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 14, 2016

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