NEone hear of XS Energy Drink?

MP3Architect

Member
Contributor
has anyone ever heard of this before. its not sold in stores. its sold through some kind of pyramid network or something.
 
Yup.. my friend sells them. they are really good. Best energy drink ive had.. and ive tried them ALL


sold by um..

quixstarr or something.
 
You might want to rinse your mouth with water after drinking those energy drinks, if you want to keep your teeth. They are 11 times more erosive than soda.
 
SciFiMan said:
You might want to rinse your mouth with water after drinking those energy drinks, if you want to keep your teeth. They are 11 times more erosive than soda.

Data/evidence to back up this claim?
 
SciFiMan said:
You might want to rinse your mouth with water after drinking those energy drinks, if you want to keep your teeth. They are 11 times more erosive than soda.

In that case I will stick to my once sometimes twice a day ice cold Pepsi (yippy)
 
I have tried the XS energy drinks too and they are very good. It was given to me by a friend and it's a bit better for your then red bull, no sugar, no or low carbs depending of the flavor. Can't comment on the tooth rotting though, don't know anything about that.
 
I like that "Monster" energy drink. No carbs or sugar, packed with vitamins and all that jazz.
 
I read it in Mens Health and that's good enough for me. I'm sure there is more proof to be found but here is the first thing I found. I like AMP and Monster, but at most 3 a month. I'm a Dew kind of guy. Another link I found mentioned that chugging is safer for teeth rather than sipping on these drinks.

http://www.news-medical.net/?id=8585
[font=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]"This study revealed that the enamel damage caused by non-cola and sports beverages was three to 11 times greater than cola-based drinks, with energy drinks and bottled lemonades causing the most harm to dental enamel," [/font]
[font=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]The study continuously exposed enamel from cavity-free molars and premolars to a variety of popular sports beverages, including energy drinks, fitness water and sports drinks, as well as non-cola beverages such as lemonade and ice tea for a period of 14 days (336 hours). The exposure time was comparable to approximately 13 years of normal beverage consumption.[/font]

jersey_emt said:
Data/evidence to back up this claim?
 
Last edited:
When I'm gonna' be up all night on boomers I always down a big ass can of whatever energy drink (usually SOBE No Fear). Those things are so damn powerful I see no other use for them other than suppliments to all night recreational drug use.
 
Back