This Is an Excellent Product. Don't Buy It from NetRush.
I've been taking these vitamins for three years now and the pure ingredients, balance and potency have delivered. So I want to encourage people to buy this vitamin, but not from the source I used this once. I'll never use it again.<br /><br />Normally, I buy this vitamin when the legend reads "ships from and sold by Amazon," but the pandemic can make standard items more scarce on this and many other sites. So I bought the 120-vitamin bottle thinking that nothing bad could happen. I waited until my previous bottle was empty, then opened this one.<br /><br />Imagine my surprise when the bottle contained not 120 vitamins but three huge cotton balls and thirty-three vitamins pressed to the bottom. By then, my grace period had elapsed and I was stuck with being charged far more for 33 vitamins than anyone should be.<br /><br />It's possible that this was a fluke. It's possible that I simply received a defective jar. But we've all read stories about the places where third-party sellers on Amazon get their products -- from trash cans and wholesale bins, but also by buying massive amounts of items on sale before anyone else can benefit -- and there's no reason to support such a seller if you have evidence that at least one of the products they've sold you is horribly defective. Besides which, every great discount price that you, the consumer, should be enjoying is sucked up by vultures who clearly don't care if the cost of vitamins soars beyond your means.<br /><br />So do buy MegaFood multivitamins, whether you're over 55 or under. Just get the appropriate kind.<br /><br />But think twice about buying them from NetRush, because there's a good chance you'll be horribly disappointed.





