You should buy a Skulpt Aim because “you can’t improve what you can’t measure.” Or so they say.
But do they measure something worth improving? They claim to record body fat percentage but cite no evidence their method is accurate (or that it even works). They claim to measure muscle quality – a metric they appear to have invented – but don’t bother to define the scale.
We’re expected to watch their parade of very fit half-naked models and take their word.
That said, while it may be snake oil, it’s not necessarily a scam. The technology behind Skulpt has been used in numerous peer-reviewed studies to assess disease-induced changes in muscle composition, including several projects by Skulpt’s co-founder Dr. Seward Rutkove, Professor of Neurology at the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center.
So let’s play along, shall we? What exactly does Skulpt Aim measure?