Not a top 10. One pick. Every milligram on the label, no "Energy Matrix," priced like the ingredients actually cost what they cost.
200mg caffeine, 3.2g beta-alanine, 6g citrulline malate, all printed as exact numbers, not folded into an unlabeled blend. NSF Certified for Sport, which means an independent lab tested the finished product for roughly 290 banned substances and confirmed the label matches what's inside (NSF).
Every other pre-workout tub in this category leans on a name like "Pump Complex" or "Focus Matrix" instead of a milligram number. That's not automatically a scam; FDA's own labeling rule (21 CFR 101.36(c)) allows a proprietary blend to list its total combined weight without breaking out each ingredient's individual dose (eCFR). But it means you cannot tell if you're getting a clinically studied dose of citrulline (6-8g) or a token 500mg sprinkled in mostly for the label. The FTC has separately said it wants individual-ingredient substantiation behind blend claims, not just a total weight (CRN). Our pick skips the argument entirely by printing every number.
Do the math on a typical proprietary-blend pre-workout: a 20-serving tub at $60 works out to $3 per scoop, more than double our pick, for a formula you can't actually verify. You're paying a premium for the branding on the blend name, not for a dose you can check against published research. If the label says "Energy Matrix" instead of milligrams, you're buying the mystery, not the caffeine.
Think we're wrong? Pull up your own tub's label and check for a milligram number next to caffeine, beta-alanine, and citrulline. If it just says "proprietary blend, 8g," that's the whole argument in one line. Tell us in the comments if your favorite tub actually discloses.