Uromen Journal is an independent editorial publication documenting the patterns, habits, and nutritional choices of active men. Founded in Jakarta, written with curiosity, edited with rigour.
Uromen Journal began as a personal record-keeping exercise. The founding editor, Marcus Chen, had spent several years navigating the supplement market — reading conflicting information, encountering products with inconsistent labelling, and finding a gap between the rigour of published nutritional research and the casualness of most popular supplement coverage.
The observation was straightforward: most writing about men's supplementation either defaulted to product promotion or to overly technical summaries of individual studies, neither of which served a reader trying to build an intelligent daily routine. There was a space for something that read with editorial quality and cited published nutritional literature without pretending to be a research journal.
Uromen Journal occupies that space. It is not affiliated with supplement brands, does not carry product advertising, and does not present itself as an authority on individual nutritional decisions. It is a publication that observes, documents, and reflects — and invites readers to do the same with their own habits.
Marcus oversees editorial direction and leads the publication's coverage of daily supplement stacking habits, vitamin D, magnesium, and nutritional balance for active men. He brings a background in independent publishing and a personal practice of supplement journalling that informs the publication's observational register.
Adrian focuses on creatine and physical output, protein intake patterns, and the intersection of resistance training habits with nutritional awareness. His editorial approach draws on published sports nutrition literature and a systematic review process developed over several years of active lifestyle writing.
Reza brings an Indonesia-specific perspective to supplement coverage, examining how local dietary patterns, urban lifestyle pressures, and regional nutritional habits interact with supplement stacking decisions. His writing on omega-3, zinc, and men's nutritional balance reflects both published research and contextual observation.
Uromen Journal is an independent editorial publication exploring everyday supplementation habits, nutritional awareness, and active lifestyle choices for men. The publication is not affiliated with any commercial, governmental, or institutional body.
The publication's position on supplementation is deliberate: supplements are framed as additions to a whole-food diet, not replacements for it. Every article that examines a specific supplement — vitamin D, creatine, omega-3, magnesium, zinc, B vitamins — does so within the context of a broader nutritional routine, citing published nutritional research and distinguishing between evidence-informed observation and speculative claims.
Readers are consistently reminded that nutritional decisions are personal, that published research represents population-level observations rather than individual prescriptions, and that speaking with a qualified wellness professional remains the appropriate channel for specific concerns about daily routines and nutritional patterns.
Read our MethodologyVitamin D, omega-3, magnesium, zinc, creatine, B vitamins, protein, and iron — examined through the lens of men's daily nutritional awareness and supplement stacking habits, with references to published nutritional research.
The relationship between resistance training habits, endurance activity, and nutritional support. Recovery rhythm, energy awareness, and the patterns that active men observe in their own performance when nutritional habits shift.
Editorial summaries of published nutritional research relevant to active men. Peer-reviewed studies, population-level nutritional surveys, and sport nutrition literature — translated from academic register into accessible editorial prose.
"The most useful nutritional writing does not tell men what to do. It shows them what questions are worth asking."— Marcus Chen, Founding Editor, Uromen Journal
Uromen Journal accepts pitches from writers with a demonstrated interest in men's nutritional awareness and active lifestyle habits. The publication also welcomes corrections, feedback, and research suggestions from readers familiar with published nutritional literature.