Both sides.
One vow.
The brand sits at the intersection of two things that should have been connected all along: performance built on data, and nutrition built on memory. This is where they meet.
The Name
雲 (Yún)
+ Vow
= Yunvo
雲 is the founder's Chinese name. Came here at four. Grew up in rooms where it was easier to go by something else, and gradually it got set aside. Reclaiming it is part of what this brand is.
In Mandarin, 雲 means cloud. Present before you name it. The quality every product here is chasing: something that settles without announcing itself.
Vow is the commitment: build the supplements worth taking, train the athletes worth training, and never pad either with things that didn't earn their place.
"A vow to go into flavor territory nobody in supplements has had the range to explore. Starting where the pantry runs deepest."
The Problem
Gymflation
is real.
Fitness culture has inflated expectations beyond what the research supports. Social media rewards statistical anomalies and presents them as baselines. PEDs get normalized into silence. Before-and-afters erase the variables. Supplement brands profit from exactly that gap.
The tools at Yunvo Labs exist to show you where you actually stand in the real population distribution. Not to shame. To calibrate. The math on what "elite" actually means is worth knowing.
What they sell
The highlight reel
Genetic outliers. Best lighting. 4–6 year transformations compressed to 12 weeks. PED-assisted physiques marketed as "hard work and discipline."
What the data says
You're already rare
A natural athlete who trains consistently and maintains body composition is a statistical outlier in the real population. The tools prove it, with actual math, not a compliment.
What they sell
Anecdote as evidence
"It worked for me" as a product claim. Testimonials cherry-picked for conversion. N=1 presented as the standard.
What the data says
Aggregates tell the truth
Population distributions. Probability models. Log-normal curves. The picture that requires actual methodology, not one person's transformation photo.
The Work
Two products.
One methodology.
Coaching and supplements sit on opposite ends of what Yunvo does, but both exist for the same reason: the gap between what the research supports and what the fitness industry sells in its place is enormous, and almost nobody is closing it.
On the coaching side, that means programming treated like a hypothesis. Every block built around measurable inputs, debriefed at the end, and adjusted before the next one starts. An iterative process with a real feedback loop — built specifically for each athlete, not templated.
On the supplement side, it means two compounds with decades of research behind them, dosed correctly, in flavors developed from an actual original rather than a marketing brief. Nothing on the label that isn't in the bag.
Built by someone with eight years of serious training, an MS in Applied Data Science from USC, and NASM certification. The background is evidence, not a pitch.
Coaching
Every block is a hypothesis
Programming built around measurable inputs. Deload when the data says deload. Increase when the trend supports it.
Tools
Population tells the truth
Distributions, percentiles, probability models. What "elite" actually means in the math. Not the algorithm.
Supplements
Label = formula
Clinically dosed where the science supports it. Flavors developed from the source. Nothing padded, nothing hidden.
The Foundation
First meet.
Where it started.
USAPL sanctioned. Men's Raw Open. First meet, heavier build. The scoreboard showed the name and the number. This is where the methodology was tested under real pressure, not just in a training block.
"The numbers on the scoreboard don't lie. Neither does what it cost to put them there."
The Other Half
Flavors nobody
in supplements
had the range for.
The supplement industry built its flavor catalog around a demographic. Fruit punch. Blue raspberry. Watermelon. Generic sweet that doesn't taste like any real version of those things. Approximations designed by a marketing brief, not a memory.
There's an entire pantry that got left out. Small glass bottles pulled from the fridge. Azuki paste in everything. The specific sweetness of fermented milk after school. Mochi, black sesame, honey milk. Flavors that mean something before they mean "gains," because they meant something first.
The first product is creatine monohydrate in the flavor of a cultured yogurt drink most people will recognize the moment they taste it. No brand name attached. Just the flavor, done right. Clean formula, clinically dosed, nothing on the label that isn't in the bag.
This isn't nostalgia as marketing. It's nostalgia as a quality standard. The original is worth matching.
"The goal was never to make a supplement that tastes like dessert. It was to make one that tastes like something you already love, before supplements existed."
First · Creatine
OG Yogurt Drink Flavor
Sweet. Tangy. You'll recognize it. 5g creatine monohydrate. Stevia + monk fruit. No dyes. No filler.
Next · Directions
Azuki · Black Sesame · More
Directions, not dates. The pantry is deep. Each one ships when it earns its place.
Philosophy
Three things
that don't move.
On data
"The answer to 'how hard should I train' shouldn't be 'harder.' It should come with a number and a reason."
Every coaching block is a hypothesis. Every tool is built on published research. The methodology is the product, not the motivation. Calibration, not hype.
On trust
"If it doesn't earn its place on the label, it isn't in the bag."
No proprietary blends. No FD&C dyes. Clinically dosed where the science supports it. The formula is exactly what the label says: nothing padded, nothing hidden.
On flavor
"These flavors existed in real kitchens, real corner stores, real childhoods. They belong in supplements too."
Honey milk. OG yogurt. Azuki. Black sesame. The original is the quality standard. Not approximated. Matched.
Ready to train with the methodology? Or join the Labs waitlist.