Formula overview
The ingredient profile the official materials keep emphasizing
The official sales page and the current Science Genics product listing describe iGenics as a 12-ingredient formula.
Instead of centering the entire pitch on one nutrient, the brand builds the product around a familiar eye-health base
and then adds botanicals to make the formula feel broader and more differentiated.
The ingredient names or groups that are clearly referenced across the official materials include lutein, zeaxanthin,
vitamin C, vitamin E, zinc, copper, ginkgo biloba, bilberry, saffron, turmeric, and Bioperine. The official copy also
describes the formula as vegan and free from cheap fillers, and the brand specifically highlights turmeric as both a
functional ingredient and part of its “no filler” positioning.
That does not mean every line of promotional copy should be treated as a guaranteed outcome. It does mean the product is
being sold on the strength of a broad nutrition approach rather than a narrow claim. For buyers, that is usually the more
useful way to evaluate it: are you looking for a straightforward eye-health stack with familiar carotenoids, antioxidant
vitamins, trace minerals, and a few added plant ingredients, or would you rather keep things simpler?
AREDS-2 style base
The official materials repeatedly reference the AREDS-2 pattern and explicitly name lutein, zeaxanthin,
vitamin C, vitamin E, zinc, and copper as core eye-health nutrients.
Added botanicals
Ginkgo biloba, bilberry, saffron, turmeric, and Bioperine are used to position iGenics as a broader formula
than a standard shelf supplement.
Manufacturing angle
The supplied official materials reference a GMP-certified facility in the United States and third-party testing,
which is part of the trust story the brand uses around the formula.
How to read the claims
It is reasonable to treat the ingredient list and package structure as the most concrete information,
while reading aggressive “clearer vision” language as marketing rather than as a promise.