Everyone argues one side — looks, game, status — but when you look at it in practice, they’re all partially right. The mistake is thinking one replaces the others instead of stacking them.
Connor goes into the idea of the “reps pill,” which is probably the most overlooked part of all of this. You can have perfect looks and still get nowhere if you don’t take action. At the same time, improving your physical structure changes how you’re perceived before you even speak.
Then it gets into the deeper part — why looksmaxxing isn’t really about “adding” anything artificial, but restoring what modern environments have taken away. Soft food, mouth breathing, allergies — all of it contributes to weaker jawlines and facial structure over time.
The chin work and bone stimulation demonstration pushes that idea further. It sounds extreme at first, but the underlying concept is about adaptation and stimulus — the same principle behind training any part of the body.
Most people stay stuck debating theories.
Very few actually test, adjust, and combine everything — behavior, repetition, and physical development.
That’s where the real difference shows up.