Functional beverage
Kim K's new electrolyte / functional beverage line
The pastel can with the celebrity face and a supplement-fact panel that does not match the marketing
The newest celebrity-fronted functional beverage is positioned as a hydration / wellness / 'reset' drink. The branding is immaculate. The supplement-fact panel is, on close reading, a sweetened low-electrolyte beverage with a sprinkle of vitamin B and a clever flavour system. It will not hydrate you the way the marketing implies, and the daily-use pattern it encourages is a small sympathetic stressor, not a regulator.
What it claims
- Hydration, focus, glow, 'reset'
- Clean label, low sugar, functional vitamins
- Daily wellness ritual
What the label is not telling you
- Sodium and potassium dosing is well below the threshold needed for actual electrolyte replenishment for an adult — closer to a flavoured water than to an oral rehydration solution
- The sweetener and acidity load is not negligible — repeated daily intake nudges the gut microbiome and dental enamel in directions the brand does not advertise
- The 'functional' actives (B-vitamins, adaptogens) are dosed at sub-clinical levels — present on the label, absent in the body
- The price-per-mineral is one of the worst on the category shelf
Effect on the nervous system
Frequent sweetened, artificially flavoured beverages produce small repeated dopamine spikes and a low-grade insulin response. On a stressed nervous system, that pattern reinforces the same sympathetic loop the drink is being marketed to soothe. A glass of water with a pinch of sea salt and a squeeze of citrus does the actual hydration job for €0.05.
Who it might suit
Almost no one as a daily ritual. As a once-a-week treat in place of a soda, it is fine. As a wellness strategy, it is theatre.
Who should skip it
Anyone with a stress-driven skin pattern, anyone managing blood sugar, anyone trying to reduce decision fatigue around 'wellness purchases.'
Bottom line
Save your money. For real electrolyte replenishment use sea salt + lemon + water, or a properly dosed clinical electrolyte. The verified shortlist we recommend lives at thecodex.world.