A little over two years ago I tried Oxypowder during a time that was sort of a critical stage of an overall long and gradual awakening process. At that time I had not yet found many of the sources of information that as of today have become a regular part of how and where I get some of my "news", like CureZone.
Your question asked - "which one is better and give more satisfactory results"? In all honesty this is a kind of question that perpetually defies a conclusive and objective answer; just like the "who is the greatest of all time?" kind of question that frequently circulates. We really do not have satisfactory answers to other questions, like "what does better really mean?", "what does satisfactory?" really mean, so it makes sense we do not and will likely never achieve a sufficient and universal answer to a question made up with these kinds of words. What we do have are a lot of people who will gladly give you their subjective answer. Here's mine.
#1 - answers like "read the label" may tell you something. It's up to you to decide if this something is enough to satsify. If it satisfies, good for you. For myself personally, over the years I have found that such labels, the ones required by law to inform me of some of the ingredients of a commercial product, have a habit of not satisfying my original sense of inquiry and concern. These kinds of labels, and the so-called laws requiring them, have come to not mean much of anything to me. Along the way I've found that the bigger the commercial provider, the less I care to know what words and how they go about arranging what words on their product labels. In plain words, I don't trust the average big-business providers to tell me what I deserve and need to know; the bigger they are, the less I care to know what their labels say. In plain words, the related laws basically sanction and facilitate the process for big corp providers to decieve, mislead, and lie to you about their products through the information they are required to print on labels of products. Underscoring all of this is the kind of hard-core truth and information this kind of law allows providers to omit from their label.
Example: many commercial products, especially but not limited to those provided by big corporations, include a label detailing ingredients such as "may contain other ingredients and artificial colors". This is like those times when you look a word up in the dictionary and the definition contains the word itself. It did not take me long to arrive at the distinct conclusion that such big providers may be exhibiting through their product labels a missed calling to be a comedian, and the law in this case only serves as the perfect sidekick assistant, a foil, like what Jerry was to Dean, Abbot to Costello, Emma to Sid. As far as this goes, in comparison, I found the label on the Oxy-powder bottle to be fairly tame and mild compared to the many other labels out there being provided by all kinds of big food, supplment and vitamin providers.
2 - a bottle of Oxypowder capsules, in front of me at the moment, from a purhcase a little over two years ago, has the following "ingredients" label:
Serving size - 5 capsules
Calories - 0
Shelf life from date of purchase - 4 years
Each serving contains complex Magnesium Compound* , Organic Germanium-132*, Natural Citric Acid* and the ubiquitous Other Ingredients in this case in the form of vegetarian capsules. (How much does this really tell anyone? Me- not much)
* Each of the above 3 supposedly main ingredients are listed by % Daily Value, which of course is a derivative of the FDA's beknighted RDA - recommnended daily allowance, that in the case of Oxypowder, has not been established for % Daily Value.
3 - The instruction portion of the label instructs: "As a dietary supplement the recommended dose for rapid cleanse is 10 capsules before bed the first 7 days". This part of the label confused me when comparing to the Daily Dose section of the same label. The phrase "rapid cleanse" may or may not be a critical ingredient to what makes this product better, or not, or satisfactory, or not, from one person to the next.
4 - On day 1 I sort of split the difference between daily dose of 5 and daily dose of 10 before bed, and took 8 capsules all at once, in the morning, which for me is usually well before bed. Side question: why do people go to bed, do all people go to bed at the same time for the same reasons? Within several hours I had the experience that people generally describe as the kind of explosive rectal peeing that occurs during a liver flush. It went on for several hours before it subsided.
5 - This concluded what so far has been my first and only experience using Oxypowder. I still have a full, unopened bottle as well as the now partially used bottle from that first experience...... just in case I ever want to try it again. It would still be close to a year before I first got a bottle of LBB and tried it.
6 - The bottle of LBB also has a label, in comparisson, a simple label divided into two sections: ingredients; obligatory disclaimer that I assume is minimally required by FDA law.
The ingredients list is made up only of words that I recognize as herbs, and only herbs that in and of themselves are source ingredients not made up by other ingredients. Example - Barberry Bark, Cascara Sagrada Bark, Cayenne, Ginger, Lobelia and Olive Leaf. I see no convoluted phrases or misleading terms like "other ingredients", or "complex compound" or generic "acids", any of which are most likely made up of some kind of other ingredients. Which ones? It's not that I expect an ingredients label to give me the information I need to reconstruct the recipe on my own, but it should at least give a genuine clue of being oriented in that direction. Does MH's label tell me every single ingredient? I don't know, I doubt it and I am satisfied with this. In general and to this point, I trust people like MH and their labels. In general I don't trust the big corps who only use the so-called laws to hind behind what they are doing with their products.
The disclaimer section of the label: Not tested or approved by the FDA or FTC for safety or effectiveness. Herbal formulas are experimental use only. Understand all foods, drugs & supplements if you are pregnant or wanting to become pregnant before you practice: Selp-Applied Prevention.
Nutritional Supplement 100% money back guarantee / return to place of purchase.
7 - I've been using LBB for over a year now. It took a while for me to learn, adapt and adjust to how it works within my body. I've found it generally does what I have read that it does and what others, including MH, told me it does. What it does, as best as I can tell, is oriented towards the long term view, and not the short term view of something described as "for rapid cleanse". Does this make it better or most satisfactory? Objectively, I cannot say. Ask 1000 people and you will likely get, conservatively, a 100 examples of subjective answer.
Good luck!