Braden Peters, better known online as Clavicular, has openly detailed the daily cocktail of drugs and supplements he claims help him chase what he calls his “ideal physique.” The revelation, shared during an interview with The New York Times, has sparked both curiosity and alarm across social media.The 20 year old internet figure has already built a controversial reputation through the online movement known as looksmaxxing. Peters has previously gone viral for hitting his own jaw with a hammer in an attempt to sharpen his facial structure. Now, his admission about the substances he takes every day has raised serious concerns among medical professionals and health experts.
Clavicular shocks viewers after detailing testosterone-heavy drug routine
During the interview, Peters listed several substances he regularly uses in pursuit of his desired look. These include 220 mg of testosterone to boost muscle mass and bone density, along with 12 mg of retatrutide, an experimental weight loss drug. He also mentioned Melanotan 2, which can darken skin tone without sun exposure.The influencer described his routine as part of a broader lifestyle experiment focused on both appearance and mental performance.“I don’t just biohack in the context of looksmaxxing,” he added. “I’m also a cognitionmaxxer, so I’ve got a very fine tuned nootropic stack.”Alongside testosterone and retatrutide, Peters said he takes melatonin, L-glutathione, NAD+, Anavar, Accutane, and Nebivolol. While he presents the regimen as a calculated system for optimization, doctors warn that mixing so many substances can be dangerous.Speaking to LADbible, physician Suzanne Wylie urged caution about the growing trend.“The overriding concern from a health perspective is that combining multiple pharmacological agents, particularly outside of medical supervision, carries a very high risk of serious short-term and long-term harm,” she explained.She also warned that hormone altering drugs and stimulants can interact unpredictably.“Even when people think they are simply trying to “optimise” their bodies, the combination of these substances, especially stimulants and hormone-altering drugs, can interact in unpredictable and dangerous ways, affecting the heart, liver, kidneys, brain and endocrine system,”Wylie added that people experimenting with such stacks should pause before following viral internet trends.“Self-administering a cocktail of performance-enhancers, stimulants and research chemicals in pursuit of appearance ideals is not only medically unsafe but can have lifelong consequences for physical and mental health,” she added.







