777 started the way most kratom stories do: at a smoke-shop counter, paying too much for a bottle that wouldn’t say what was in it. One of us spent years as that customer — switching brands, guessing at doses, hoping the next bottle behaved like the last one. It rarely did.
The other one of us is his uncle: 28 years in pharmaceutical manufacturing, a career spent making sure a tablet is exactly what its label says. He looked at what the counter was selling and saw what was missing — a measured dose, a repeatable process, and a lab report anyone could read.
So we built the product we couldn’t buy: 7‑OH isolated and dosed to the milligram, paired with MGM‑15, pressed into a cross-scored tablet, and tested batch by batch. Nothing about it is mysterious. That’s the point.
“A tablet either matches its label, or it doesn’t ship.”
The house rule — 28 years in pharma manufacturingFour steps, in the same order every batch. No shortcuts, no “proprietary blend.”
7‑hydroxymitragynine is isolated from kratom leaf and measured to the milligram — a known amount of the one compound doing the work, instead of leaf powder in unpredictable ratios.
MGM‑15 is blended in at a fixed 1:10 ratio — 2mg per 20mg of 7‑OH, scaling with strength. It’s the expensive half of the formula, and the reason most brands skip it.
The blend is pressed into tablets in a cGMP facility and cross-scored. The score isn’t decoration: a quarter tablet is one precise serving, the same every time.
Every batch goes to an independent lab for HPLC analysis before it ships. If the numbers don’t match the label, it doesn’t leave the building.
Plenty of labels say “lab tested.” Here is what ours means: every production batch — not a one-time sample — is sent to FESA Labs (Food & Environment Safety Analytical Lab) in Santa Ana, California. They run HPLC — high-performance liquid chromatography — the standard method for quantifying exactly how many milligrams of each alkaloid are in a serving.
The result is a certificate of analysis — a COA — issued per batch. Reading ours takes about a minute:
1. Match the Sample ID printed on the report (bottom left of page 1) to the batch number on your bottle.
2. Find the 7‑OH Mitragynine row — that’s the measured milligrams per serving, and it should match the label.
3. Check the MGM‑15 row the same way.
4. “ND” on the remaining rows means not detected.
Both current COAs are published below — no email wall, no login. The original PDFs are one click away.
One report per strength, current batch. Click a document to inspect it at full size.
Real lab results. Every batch is HPLC-tested by an independent lab, and every COA is public — batch ID on the bottle, PDF on this site.
Exact-dose tablets. Pressed in a cGMP facility and cross-scored, so a quarter tablet is one precise serving — no scales, no eyeballing.
No fake reviews. Every quote on this site comes from a real customer. We’d rather have 1,200 honest ones than 10,000 invented ones.
Two strengths, one flavor, every batch tested.
The rest of the story is on the bottle.