Sneako: Peptides Could End Up Being “More Harmful Than The Vaccine,” Predicts Studies Will Come Out In A Few Years Exposing Major Health Risks

Popular online creator SNEAKO is sounding the alarm on what he sees as the next major public health blind spot, warning his viewers that peptides, widely embraced in fitness and biohacking communities, could eventually be exposed as far more dangerous than many people currently believe.

During a recent broadcast session, SNEAKO delivered a monologue aimed at the growing culture of performance enhancement among young men online, drawing direct comparisons to how society once viewed vaping as a harmless cigarette alternative.

“Just like vaping and all these new developments recently, a year or two later, they say how harmful it really is,” he told his audience. “For so long, they thought that vaping was the correct alternative to smoking cigarettes. Turns out it wasn’t.”

SNEAKO then offered a prediction that drew immediate pushback from his own chat.

“I think that a lot of these peptides are probably gonna be more harmful than the vaccine,” he said. “I think a lot of people are gonna realize they’re trying to get retatrutide and all this stuff.”

He made clear his personal position on the matter. He stated, “I don’t take anything. I don’t recommend you take anything. I don’t agree with that stuff.”

Previously, content creator Clavicular appeared on an online broadcast with SNEAKO and discussed his own history with testosterone and other compounds. Clavicular disclosed that he began using testosterone at age 14, ordering it online without a prescription.

“I just ordered it on the internet. You could just buy it on the clear, but I don’t like to talk about sourcing too much,” he explained.

When asked about fertility, Clavicular confirmed that he is currently unable to father children. “Right now, I am infertile, but I’m not able to have a kid right now. But if I wanted to, there’s a protocol I could put in place to be immediately good again,” he said.

He continued: “It’s just like a negative feedback loop when you’re not needing to produce testosterone anymore because your body realizes, okay, we’re getting it from an outside source.”

SNEAKO asked directly whether Clavicular was producing any natural testosterone at all. “No. None,” Clavicular replied.

Despite this, Clavicular expressed confidence that restoring fertility would be achievable if desired.

“You just take something that signals your brain to restart the production. You stop taking the testosterone. Your levels start to diminish. You agonize the receptors and then your body just starts producing it again,” he said. He dismissed viewer skepticism, saying those who disagreed were “not well versed in pharmacology.”

Clavicular also recounted a brief and turbulent experience with trenbolone, a powerful anabolic compound. “I took tren earlier this year, but all my hair started falling out and it made me a little crazy,” he admitted, noting that increased anger had become a problem during that period. He said his hair ultimately returned after using minoxidil.

He framed his current testosterone use as a lifestyle decision rather than a pursuit of extreme physique. “Right now I’m just on TRT. It’s more of like a lifestyle and energy thing than trying to get like a roided up bodybuilder. I just want like a little bit of exercise on,” he said.

SNEAKO, however, remained unconvinced by that reasoning, drawing a firm line between legitimate self-improvement and chemical shortcuts. “There’s a difference between investing in clothes and trying to look the best and trimming your beard and then taking peptides,” he said in his recent broadcast.

He also pushed back on the increasingly aggressive defense of peptides he had been observing online, noting a shift in how passionately people had begun advocating for them.

He stated, “A year ago, people weren’t even defending it that hard. I’m seeing that people are out of nowhere saying yeah, you’re a bot. How do you know that? These are brand new. This has not been severely tested.”

His core argument rested on a warning about the timeline of medical knowledge. “My prediction, a couple of years from now, they’re gonna release all these studies that these peptides are terrible for you,” he said.