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From: skepticzonepodcast
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  • A sticker that reacts with the electrical fields in your body....

    All of my Nope

  • Can someone tell me,do the power balance worked or not? (please answer me if you tried it before)

  • @TitanicShip1998 No, these are a scam, the owner has even admitted it. (google it), this video should have been enough to have you want to keep your money in your pocket.

  • Im not gonna lie i shoved her arround just as much both times. I looked up some stuff on the braclet and some college found out that negative ions increase anything that has to do with the human body. Then i looked at another vid on here and a teacher did a test to see how many ions were in the braclet, wich there happend to be 27 per cubic centimer (i belive it was centimerter) test or no test, that pretty cool. Im not trying to down the product or promote it. in the end, its just another fad.

  • Tho its a bummer the guy who did the tests on those 6 people failed. I think the bracelet somehow works any way. My boyfriend bought me one and without telling my mom what it was i had her stand on one leg and pushed her arround and put pressure on her arms etc and she stumbled arround. Then i put the braclet on her and she barley budged then she was like "Woah What The Fuck Is That???!!!" so when someone is willing to tell me how it ACTUALLY works id be really stoaked. Till then im wearing mine

  • @antonie2bassett The trouble is your test was not double-blind. You knew she had the band on or off. It's mostly the person doing the pushing that controls the test.

  • @antonie2bassett try doing it twice with out the bracelet.. pretend that you're putting on the bracelet then do the balance test.. the body knows what to do the second time that's why you won't budge the second time.. give credit to your body for adapting to a same situation that was done twice..

  • what i dont get is that if it works when you thinks it does let them fucking think tht it helps them so like dont rain on the fucking parade jesus christ like that old women it helps her like fuck off you stupid reporters

  • @Infamous4337 the guy selling the bracelets is a millionaire. he made millions of dollars by lying to people. if you think that's ok then i don't know what

  • @Infamous4337 It's called the Placebo effect. Look it up. And for goodness sake learn some grammar and punctuation.

  • people make fake one i got a fake one so I'm practically wearing just a weird looking bracelet

  • @bykeem428 No, you a wearing a bracelet with exactly the same effects as a 'real' one ;)

  • fake as hell

  • lol basically wearing something gives you more confidence.

  • its all in peoples head i can give you a red string and says it can help with power and balance if you believed in it it may work because its all mind tricks

  • I would have to say I 100% agree with you on this one Richard!!

  • if this is true the nba will ban tham like it banned the apl shoes

  • Fake and Gay

  • i will put test into simplest terms as i used to work for them

    1st test pull down normally

    2nd extend arms pushing down with same force you lose leverage further away your body is away from your arms

  • I WORK FOR ENERGY ARMOR WE ARE BETTER WE HAVE 500 ION POWER HAS BALANSE 18 ION. POWER HAS FAKE BANDS

  • I steal them :)

  • I cannot believe that my body is too weak to do all these actions. How could people in the past live without it. I have the strong feeling that this is another unnecessary item of the 21st century and it only aims to profit.

    The matter is not whether it actually helps or not but whether you want a bracelet to give you strength and balance. Why do you want to rely on a bracelet for such when you can just exercise? - a humble opinion.

  • nice tests! good job!

  • its like a placebo for retards

  • I don't know why he has to push him to test it, I don't think that is a good test. They should make them try and balance on a train or something wobbly.

  • Answer me please. I am about to buy one, but I don't know if it really works. And it is really expensive for me (teenager with pocket money, you know :P) to spend my money. So does it really works? Or I will waste my money to a piece of plastic?

  • @DotArtistas Did you watch the video? It clearly fails the blinded tests. So no, the bracelets do not work.

  • The thing is that everyone is expecting superior improvements in everything when the company says expect only about 10 to 20 percent increase. There is no way that you can improve balance in seconds but the ions blocking the radiation does make sense.

  • It does work it has two magnets that seperate blood cells and gives you more electroytes and more power/flex/balance

  • my friend bought a bracelet for 40euro,this is all fake... there is no power balance hologram its just a fucking sticker... this is all about making money

  • Well regarless if it works or not i just bought two pairs on ebay for two bucks.

  • FAKE.!!

  • I recieved one as a gift. So I wear it. End of story. No enhanced abilities, no more balance or less fatigue. It's there, and it looks good.

  • I got one and it worked, just a lil

    but mostly because it looks good on me

  • i bought it cuz i like them. i never beleived in it, but i dont really care

  • im only ten and i got the bracelet for only 3.99 and when i pick up my 5 yr old sis i dont feel tired i feel stronger and it has the hologram

  • @nmuninzo It's sad that sometimes grown ups try to trick other people and take their money. Holograms cannot make your stronger but they do look amazing. 

  • They do work!

  • after I put it on it started to vibrate WTH!

  • LOL @ retards that give away their money for 2 cents of plastic. YOU DESERVE TO BE FOOLED.

  • I just wore this cuz it kinda looked good on me

  • call me Daddy :P

  • its different for everyone

  • @Blimp07Productions So for the people it doesn't work for... they just wasted $60. Is that what you're saying?

  • @SirFakeName yea they should see if it works on them; psychologically or physically before they buy it. and i got the exact same one for $7 so i just bought it anyway.

  • i still want wun fake or not and if it doesnt work ill admit too any1 it doesnt

  • i think does cause i benched 120 without than one day at school my friend gave me is then when i got back home i bench 120 and it felt light so i put 20 more and still felt a little light than i added another 10 and i could still lift and before with 120 i could only lift it about 4 or 5 times but with 170 i lifted like 6 or 7

  • 500% increased strength... So I should be superman now?

  • placebo!

  • ibought mine for 20 there ripping every one off ahaa

  • i made my own magic bracelet, you can fly with mine

  • PLACEBO to max.

  • they admitted its all bullshit. so this video is fucking pointless. lmfao im happy im not one of the retards who believed in this shit.

  • This shit actually works. I have it.

  • Its dumb its all mental. You can wear a rubber band and do the samething.

  • @TheMrGeorgiatechfan When I was trying this the demonstrators switched the band for one which they had removed the holograms. I was like "hey, it no longer works", then they said look at the band and it had no holograms.

  • i think the EFX bracelets work the best. is there another brand that you think works better? i would really like to know. i am going to buy another one and i want it to be a better than the one i have right now.

  • @tylers911 None, repeat, none of them have any real evidence to back them up. Spend your money on your favorite music.

  • @tylers911 I have only tried the PowerBalance but I would expect other ones to work also. Do you think that wearing more of them is better than one. It seems to me that the effect is ether happening or not happening. It does not seem to get stronger or weaker.

  • I would say it is a power of mind bracelet, but the bracelet itself does not do what it claims. also, most people are buying these for sports... so whats the actual performance increase>? absolutely nothing because your not thinking about your bracelet when your playing, and there is no placebo effect. I would say your really good at taking all these balance tests though because of the power of your mind and placebo effect. its a very convincing test... but there is no performance increase

  • @funschtuff What I posted is the only thing I saw on there website. My apologies . I still stand by my statement placebo or not it's still working for the individual who believes.

  • STOOGE!

  • If people believe THIS SHIT!

    And not EVOLUTION

    How can you then say religion beats science, if you believe this FUCKING piece of rubbish.

    You can see exactly why I am going atheist.

    Anyway, credits to the guy who sells this, pure genius. Wish I could cash out of people ignorance with stuff like this and scientology. Works exactly like a spam email does. You have nothing to lose right? So why not be a complete and utter moron?

  • Putting his Chiropractic reputation on the line? Sure, Ill put nothing on the line also. 500% increase in strength... wow, this sounds pretty honest. Remember this guy cant lie.. reputation is on the line! He could almost lift a car after... interesting... :p

  • Just so you know, the company admitted to the bracelets being a fraud.

    And my friend had one, and we cut it open...the hologram thing? yeah its a shiny sticker. You guys paid for plastic and a shiny sticker.

  • @TheZOMGio What exactly is your definition of hologram? Surely you can hold the bracelet and tell thats it nothing but a sticker. That much is obvious and as far as they company admitting that they are a fraud. No says I." Contrary to recent assertions in the Australian press, Power Balance has not made a statement that our product is ineffective. This is simply untrue. Strait from there website." If you think it works then work it does. Placebo effect? Maybe but it still works.

  • Here's the truth about these scams:

    theness.com/neurologicablog/?p­=2672

  • It's a sad state of science education when people are so easily fooled. Of course this bracelet and card is a scam. There is no way they could affect the body as the sellers claim. How does one go about embedding a frequency into a thin piece of mylar? Ridiculous.

  • the Australian skeptic society! bhaaahh!!!

  • To imply (at lest whn i when I watched it) that the Placebo effect made the person at 4:50 lift the car is incorrect. The Placebo effect is psychological not physical. It was his unconscious mind that made his muscle use its full strength (we dont use all our muscle normlly) and probabally injuired the arm muscles.

    An example of a placebo called be that acupuncture cures cancer. The person may believe that the cancer is gone and the person may feel much healthier but it hasnt altered physically.

  • 4:50 that isn't positive thinking or "mind over matter" that let the guy lift a car, it was ADRENALINE

  • you guys have to realize that people just do it for the trendy look lol ...stupid balance!

  • Used car salesmen must love it when a customer walks in wearing one of these.

  • lol fucking americans will buy anything

  • @atown327 LMAO your comment made my day!!

  • @missyme1995 thanks xx

  • at the end you said he picked a car up off a girl and he kept trying and he couldnt. He picked the car up cause he was scared. thats how weall are, when were scared we get stronger.

  • my friend has it and i tried it and it fucking worked it freaked me the fuck out haha im gonna get one!

  • your tests are totally bogus. they prove nothing one way or the other. any experienced ak practitioner knows enough to isolate the muscle in test. testing someone in a standing position is useless because of all the variables involved.

  • @hiodr Oh. Well if you know an experienced ak practitioner they can apply for the JREF $1,000,000

  • @hiodr

    Seems PowerBalance disagrees with you...

    google power balance australia statement

  • Theres a different brand that actually works. It's called "True Power" and it's not the just the hologram, it's the material they use to make the band that does the most.

  • I want to buy one and I hope it doesn't work just so I can post on here that it doesn't work. Why would I care if I bought something for 5 bucks that can most likely improve balance, strength, flexibility and turning out it doesn't work? It's a couple bucks and at least you can have a cool bracelet.

  • @glitch417 By buying one you will actually be telling the world that you believe a hologram allegedly tuned to a certain frequency might actually improve the physical aspects of balance, strength and flexibility. For me $6 isn't worth the cost of labelling myself as a dumb sh*t but to each their own I suppose....

  • Dios mio que falso y que estafa mas grande!

  • honestly even if it doesnt work, it still works the mind which contacts your epinephine to release more adrenaline to your body, this will make it seem like it is working, but your mind is really sending enzymes to signal your ephinephine, the mind can do weird things.

  • @happysauce123 I'de say thats pretty sound. Yes

    On the other hand I still feel that they should drop the technological marketing angle. When push comes to shove, they are still deceiving customers into purchasing the bracelet through made up claims.

    Your analysis is on the what's might be the most detailed I've heard thus far.

  • They're giving them away free here —> ozstock(dotcom).au/1915/Free-O­zstock-Day-Power-Plus-Balance-­Bracelet-Silicone-Wristband <— today, while stocks last. You just pay the shipping $5.98 (Aust. only).

  • its real

  • wooohoo! i can use this when im drunk

  • @lawgal12 HAHA! tell me how that sobriety test turns out.

  • hey i dont care if it works its in my head therefor it does work for me. and they frickin look awsome

  • @sweetnesisbeast So you recognize it's in your head, know how they are marketing the product, know they are lying to consumers, and you are okay with that?

    Specifically in your case it may have been worth it as I can't argue your taste in apparel. Looks aside, you seem to have realize you could have gotten the same reaction from something far cheaper or free and still are content to have been duped. I guess the looks must have justified 95% of your expense.

  • @kceovaisnt who cares if they are lying if people are sold the idea that it actually works then they have in their mind it really does. Just think of it this way dude, Nike says that their shoes will help you run faster and jump higher. Its a product and the producers are going to say what they have to, to sell their product or they will go out of business. You need to look around at everything that is being produced now a days. Like i said if people think they work then let them believe it

  • @Smetzer9 On one point you raise a valid point of how consumers often will believe what the distributors claim on any product. On the other hand, you are undercutting a very accomplished R&D team for Nike. The claims of being able to make you jump higher and run faster are accomplished using stronger and lighter materials in lower quantities to reduce mass and drag. Better traction coefficients on the soles and ergonomic fitting with better ventilation as well as shock handling and support.

  • @kceovaisnt Power balance uses a new material under the hologram that is supposed to help u perform better, so by you saying Nike uses material that will help u jump and run fast then u need to say the same for power balance. Its all mental dude. If i go out and buy new Jordan shoes im not going to be able to go out and compete with NBA players or run up and down the court faster then i normally would or jump higher for a rebound then i normally would.

  • @Smetzer9 Material density has a direct effect on the weight of the shoe. Lighter shoes enable you the potential to run faster, jump higher and fatigue less in strenuous activity. Its not superficial. Stronger materials enable designers to use less of it and increase durability. Some shoes today are half the weight of their forerunners 10 years ago. This bracelet uses new materials that benefit you how? That said, equipment does not boost talent. It just helps you to participate like all gear.

  • @Smetzer9 Jordans are a bad example. Most who play know that they are a fashion item (heavy as bricks). You could go out and buy a McClaren F1 and be able to drive faster and handle corners better, but that doesn't mean that you can win or even compete in the LeMans. But there is a performance boost in the same right. Although the benefit is far greater for the car example, the principle still stands. Power Balance doesn't have an intelligent design behind it.

  • @Smetzer9 The difference between your example and this bracelet is the man hours dedicated to the implementation of engineering feats using new technologies in materials, manufacturing, ergonomics, and sports medicine. This is all backed up by a mountain of documentation from concept to preproduction prototype. Although they do stylize them (superficial), they make only claims they can back up. Lying to consumers is never okay even if they never know it. So, what other products should I look at?

  • @kceovaisnt There is a product called Smart water that is supposed to help you focus better. They have new 5 hour energy shot drinks that is supposed to help u stay awake and more active and as a person who works night shift i can honestly tell you that it doesnt help at all.

  • @Smetzer9 I would assume you don't buy either of those or condone anyone else then right?

  • @kceovaisnt i actually do wear jordans

  • @Smetzer9 No sir, I was referring to Smart Water and 5 hour energy drinks. Jordan's are primarily fashion though I am sure there are some high performance models. Most guys who wear those, quickly learn how heavy they are once they try on another brand. Nothing wrong with wearing Jordans, but I hope you stay away from smart water and the like.

  • @kceovaisnt ive never tried smart water but they have commericals and i told u a few post ago i tried a 5 hour energy and it did nothing for me

  • people are buying them just to have them and then admit it works because they paid for it,iv got one a think its bullshit,i've got one to just to have it,but im not to sure if it axly works,it myt,i dnt knw...but whose going to admit that they knw i doesnt wrk when they pAID FOR IT.

  • I think that most people here are arguing whether or not this thing makes results. These results are based on performance which varies in benefit among people. Hard to argue them.

    The important questions are: Does this device function as an engineered product of science (as advertised) or not? Was the Power Balance company honest in their sell or not? Is the beneficial effects perceived a product of anything other than your mind? If yes to any, explain to the best of your knowledge as to how.

  • I got it for 4 dollars including tax in Dick's sporting in New Jesrey..not sure if it works..No harm trying as it is not that expensive to give it a try..!

  • @praveen27 do the balance tests and get back to us, even if you have been a bit of an idiot and wasted $4 ;-) One theory is that no one ever admits they were scammed.

  • @RavenPrecept chill out negro, I ain't building a castle with 4 bucks..who gives a shit

  • @praveen27 Well this was given as a reason why no one ever bought one and said it don't work. Have you got it yet? :-)

  • @RavenPrecept I think you are embellishing what I said. I said that it is unlikely that someone who spends a lot of money and realizes they were duped won't be the most likely person to be watching these videos.

    People don't like feeling dumb. Though I am sure there are some who might.

    The are many technical tests that you could run on this device but NO ONE is providing up a theory of operation to test it against other than the techno buzzwords on their site which describes nothing.

  • Shame on ignorants who bought this shit

  • @xRHYDDERCHx It's not ignorant to buy one, it's IGNORING it to ignore it and not buy it.

  • @RavenPrecept As I have said before. It's ignorant to assume that the effect you are feeling is holograms balancing your magnetic field making you better at whatever you are doing.

    At the very least, get to the bottom of what causes what you feel.

    Ruling out the illegitimacy of this thing because you perceive results is ignorance by definition.

  • i wanna wear one to the skatepark and see if i have more balance and strength

  • @joshifycation first do the balance tests before you buy one. Anyone selling them on the street would be happy to let you feel the effect first.

  • im wanna wear one to the skatepark and see if i have more strength and blance

  • power balance... LAME

  • They rarely show the feet of the test subject...

  • Lol well ur from something called Skepticzone so ur obviously going to be on that side of the argument. I have one and it's awesome and i have to say i agree with the kid who says if it's in your head it still "works". Placebo effect or not, this thing works for me and i would spend 20 bucks on that any day.

  • @ilikeballsinmyface8D If it "works" because it's in your head, IT'S NOT AN EFFECT OF THE BAND! It's just placebo effect -- FAKE -- and it doesn't need an object of simple plastic and credit card hologram (hahahaha what a JOKE!!!!!) in your arm. ;)

  • @xRHYDDERCHx I would like to try it with some other object and see if that works. Say a grape or something and say your body is in tune with the living fruit. Problem is if I don't believe in the effect of the grape then placebo effect may not work anyway. Not an easy thing to test properly.

  • @RavenPrecept Just like this

    xD

  • I have one and only payed like $6 for it, even if it is in your head, it still "works", but who is going to trust the Australian Skeptics Society... Really? A.S.S.?

  • @will8bill Never heard of "Australian Skeptics Society". If it only "works" because it's "in your head" then it does not do what it claims. Sorry, some of us are interested in consumer action and you should be too.

  • @skepticzonepodcast They said it in the video. ._. I'm with you on this, but the name of that thing is fucking hilarious, you gotta admit.

  • @will8bill Haha! Your retarded...

  • Im pretty sure over 75% of the people that bought these are aware that it's just a sticker, but they still believe it works. I have 7 friends who have them and they all say "yes i know it's just a sticker, but i feel better when i wear it". So as you dodged my last comment regarding an ACTUAL issue that could use people like you fighting for a REAL cause, im led to believe you only argue about this because some how it relates to you.

  • @ImJuanka 1. Your 75% figure is far off. People may realize after the purchase that it only serves as a bracelet but they purchased it based on false claims of holograms balancing the magnetic fields around your body.

    2. I am not dodging issues. If this video was related to politics I might discuss it here but it's not and I am sure that no one else wants to discuss it either. I might even agree with your perspectives but its not my intent to go there here.

    3. Its of no relation to me at all.

  • @kceovaisnt Actually you can just buy the stickers and stick them on things like shoes and surf boards.

  • @RavenPrecept Seriously? To enhance the intended performance of the shoes, boards, or other equipment?

    These items have no intrinsic currents in them so what exactly might these stickers do for equipment?

  • It cures cancer too...

  • the guy lifting a car off a girl was only adrenaline the braclet he had on was only a quidincadince.

  • If it's a placebo effect and it's working, then why does it matter if it is WORKING. Feel free to make a product thats FREE and sell it to people that does the same thing if your so mad that they are bettering peoples lives. I have not purchased one yet, but if i can trick myself with a simple sticker and rubber to perform better, id pay $200 for it.

  • @ImJuanka Say I'm a doctor. You come in to visit me because you aren't feeling well. I examine you and write a prescription for two pills of a drug called Scamusol at $200 and insurance won't cover it. Now I tell you "You need to take these spaced at 4 hours apart and take each down with 21oz. of water. So you follow my instructions and you get better right away.

    Truth, you were just dehydrated.

    If you found out would you okay with that? Or if you could do it over, would you just drink water?

  • @kceovaisnt No because this isn't that simple. There is no "oh you are simply .05lbs lighter on the left so by putting this bracelet on, it evens you out" type issue. Their problems are real, and the belief in the bracelet remedies them psychosomatically, which is still better than taking a hand full of pain killers which do more dmg to your body over time than a 1 time installment of $50.

  • @ImJuanka You missed the entire point I made and then argued a different point altogether. I'm not saying that anyone void of this product has a problem as per the "not feeling well".

    The ONLY point I was making was given that if the end result is the same as they claim, who cares how it works in order to reach that result. Placebo or not. My point is that it still is unethical. The company (doctor) would have you pay for a bracelet (Scamusol) that does nothing. TBC

  • @kceovaisnt No you missed the point in my arguement. What im trying to say is it doesn't matter if this item does nothing measureable..... it works. Doctors use placebo's for patients that they know make up psychosomatic illnesses to cure them. Yes im aware they aren't charged for this, but why wouldn't those doctors do that for people that suffer chronic back pain? If you can make somebody honestly believe that your product will work, then it will, and people will gladly pay for it.

  • @ImJuanka I'm certain that I interpreted your point the way you intended. please read below.

    I take it from your acknowledgement that medical professionals should not charge for a treatment that does not hold technical merit that you agree with the very principle of whats wrong with the marketing of this charm.

    People are gladly yet unknowingly paying for something under false pretenses. Even if they don't know it.

  • @ImJuanka What actually helps you (cures you) is the placebo effect (drinking water) of which can be done for free. Yet this company (doctor) knows that they are misleading you for your cash.

    The fact that this company markets this product by taking esoteric concepts of energy fields and attempts to make it sound like technical empirical science to fool the commoner is ethically obligatory and should not be sold as such. Thats all

    offpoint - my use of the two pill prescription is a 1 time fix.

  • @kceovaisnt If you are so worried about ethical issues, you should put your energy toward things that actually matter like goverment or world issues, this is just a bracelet. Put your energy towards what just happened in iraq with the churches getting bombed, it's Rawanda all over again, now thats an issue worth bickering about.

  • @ImJuanka I put in my fair share of hours to providing the powers that be the electronic solutions necessary to address some of those situations. One thing is certain you can't solve those problems with reason and logic.

    I don't see the problem with putting a logical mirror in front of people that buy into this stuff. They look silly and it breaths life into a growing industry of hogwash. If people just take a step back and think about it reasonably then companies like these would stop lying.

  • @kceovaisnt Just like if people took a step back and actually looked at their government, they'd realize all the wrong thats being done and then they'd change their vote next election. This would get the Government to stop lying too. Im not saying you trying to stop this is wrong, just wasted energy. People still believe in their government after all the wrong thats been done, why wouldn't they still buy a bracelet after somebody says it's fake? Thats all im getting at.

  • @ImJuanka I'm glad to see you have changed your mind. But I wasn't discussing politics nor do I intend to. Try to keep the conversation in the realm of the video.

  • @kceovaisnt My mind hasn't changed at all, i just know that you are not that different then the people selling these products. Not that you are bad, but you won't stop, as they won't.

  • @ImJuanka How am I the same? I am not lying nor am I trying to dupe anyone. If you want to buy it because you like the way it shines be my guest and say no more. If you make a comment like you did that the company is doing nothing wrong and the product works, why shouldn't I be able to make counterpoint if its valid?

    If you did not want a response don't post. I should be able to deliberate the issue without anyone saying that there are more substantial world issues that we should debate instead

  • @kceovaisnt and the change of subject is because thats actually an issue worth talking about.

  • @ImJuanka It's not relevant to this topic. Your pinning me as the opposition for an argument I am not a part of. There are several issues of global importance that you could be addressing but Id'e bet famine issues never get in the way of your three meals a day.

  • @kceovaisnt 3 meals is not healthy, it's 6 broken down into better proportions to keep your metabolism up. Also i have an issue with famine and i do my share of donating instead of bitching. Bitching will get you about as far as your arguements have thus far..... and thats not very. Funny thing is that you are still replying to my replys although you state they are irrelevent. You replay because you agree that it requires attention and are on the defensive that i've labeled you as melodramatic.

  • @ImJuanka I'm being not defensive at all. Re read my posts. I am replying to your posts because they come directly to my phone and its easy to do so don't flatter yourself. I agree those issues do need attention but this isn't the venue.

    To no avail you have attempted to troll political issues no less than six times. This alone suggests i'm not the melodramatic of the two of us.

    My 3 meals post wasn't a shot at your integrity. Its about the need to feed yourself even during a famine elsewhere.

  • @kceovaisnt lol this was fun. Im glad to see that not 1 other person cared about either yours, or my arguements meaning we both wasted time here.

  • @ImJuanka HAHA! Fair enough.

  • @and3rscor3 Ok I got this 10 year old lad to stand on one leg with his arms out in a T shape, as per the test. He has no clue what he is doing, I tell him to resist me pushing his arm down and he does not know what I mean. Then he gets it and instantly falls over. I try and get him to resist more and give him encouragement to be stronger, he is really useless at it. Then I put my band in his other hand and instantly he is strong and balanced. Him and mum are amazed at the band and want one.

  • i need this shit for my bmx XD

  • I bought this today and before trying it on I did a blind test to myself and I gotta say I got good results with this wristband but I'm just glad it can make me do things I couldn't do before

  • i dont really care if its true or not its making me do what i want to do

  • i bought mine for 10 dollars at school

  • @106DisturbedFan me too

  • 9 people bought the bracelet.

  • Chinese pumping these things out in the millions for a cost of $0.01 making major profit and all the sheep are buying one. Hahahahaha. You want to know how you get stronger, fitter, better balanced and mentally aware? Go outside, exercise, yoga and not being a fat housewife who thinks a bracelet will win them overall well-being.

  • SCAAAMMMMMM!

  • I have performed these tests using both the Placebo Band, and a tea spoon randomly chosen from a drawer, and produced exactly the same improvements in both cases. The tests being used to dupe people into believing these things work rely entirely on basic physics and anatomy, and not on some imagined magical "frequency of life" - unless you can convince me I have magical resonating tea spoons.

  • It works. I did the test, and didn't think that it will work, and it worked.

  • @smokintheblaze Can you tell me about your tests? Were they double blind? How many times did you repeat them?