Beginner guide

Start with the question you are actually trying to answer.

If you are new to peptide research, this guide helps you choose the right page before you open too many tabs.

1. Start with the question you are actually trying to answer

Before you open more pages, decide what kind of question you have. Are you trying to understand a single name such as Semaglutide? Are you trying to choose between two names? Or are you still broad enough that you mainly need orientation? The clearer the question, the easier it is to pick the right first page.

2. Use the library when you want broad orientation

The library is the best place to begin if you want to see how common topics are grouped. It helps you scan by category, primary use, complexity, and cost so you can decide which names deserve closer attention. Use it when you feel generally curious but not yet ready for a side-by-side comparison.

3. Use comparison pages when you are deciding between two names

If your question is really "How does this compare with that?" go straight to a comparison page. For example, Semaglutide vs Tirzepatide is a better starting point than two separate tabs if you already know the choice you are trying to sort through. The same applies to pages like CJC-1295 vs Ipamorelin.

4. Use the builder when you want a suggested next read

The builder is helpful when several paths all seem plausible and you want a more guided place to start. Answer the four questions, look at the preview, and use the result to choose your next one or two pages. It is not a verdict. It is simply a way to narrow the field.

5. Keep the safety page nearby

As soon as a topic starts to feel consequential, keep the safety page close by. The point of a beginner path is not just to make reading easier. It is also to keep the limits of public information visible while you learn.