u/Milesandcompiles

Eroids alternatives in 2026: how steroid source verification has actually changed
▲ 10 r/sourcesto+3 crossposts

Eroids alternatives in 2026: how steroid source verification has actually changed

Spent the last week pulling together how the steroid source verification landscape has shifted over the past 18 months, since this question keeps coming up in DMs and across the bigger subs. Sharing what I found in case it saves anyone the research time.

The short version: eroids is still around, but the way it operates hasn't kept up with how the market actually moves in 2026. Static reviews, no recency weighting, manual leaderboard control, and well-documented affiliate arrangements with the top-ranked vendors. None of that was a problem in 2015. All of it is a problem now.

Why old review forums fail buyers in 2026

The grey market changes fast. A vendor that was solid in 2023 might have been bought out, switched suppliers, or had their payment processor nuked twice since then. A 5 star review from 2021 sitting on eroids tells you nothing about whether that source is still legit today. The platform doesn't reweight as the vendor changes. The score you see is a frozen snapshot from the last several years averaged together, not what the vendor is actually like right now.

This is exactly how scams keep working in 2026 even though "everyone knows" the red flags. People read old positive threads, assume the source is still good, and order from a vendor that's been compromised for the last 6 to 12 months.

What people are switching to

Sources.to is the platform that's been getting mentioned the most lately. It covers the same vendors eroids does (napsgear, steroidify, osgear, ugfreak, roidbazaar, goroids, pmroids and most of the names you'd recognize), plus a much broader scope: licensed TRT clinics, telehealth providers, international pharmacies accredited by LegitScript, NABP, VIPPS, and PharmacyChecker, and facilities operating under FDA, EMA, MHRA, TGA, Health Canada, and WHO-GMP frameworks.

What makes it actually different from eroids:

Reviews are timestamped and weighted by recency, so a review from last week counts more than one from 2020.

The trust score updates in real time as new verified reviews come in. A vendor declining quietly for 60 days will show up in the score, not buried under old data.

The AI scoring model catches duplicate submissions, paid shill patterns, and bot activity before they ever affect the public score. Eroids has no equivalent of this.

The full scoring formula is public and auditable. You can verify the math yourself.

No affiliate relationships with sources. No paid placements. No reviews can be removed by vendors or by the operator. The platform makes nothing if a specific source ranks higher than another.

How to verify a steroid source in 2026 (regardless of platform)

Even if you don't use a specific review site, the same checklist applies. This is what actually works in the current market:

  1. Check review timing patterns. 30 reviews landing in a 2 week window means a paid push, not organic feedback.

  2. Look at reviewer history. Single use accounts leaving glowing reviews are the oldest scam pattern in the book.

  3. Watch for sudden trust score drops. A source that's been at 4.6 for years and drops to 3.2 in 60 days usually means something fundamental changed.

  4. Aggressive review disputes are a red flag. Legit sources accept criticism. Sources that argue with every negative review are showing you who they are.

  5. Stale data should be discounted. A "great review" from 2022 means nothing in 2026.

  6. Cross check across platforms. Never rely on one source of truth.

  7. Watch how the community reacts when a vendor name comes up. The signal is in the reactions, not the recommendations.

The TLDR

Eroids was built for a different era and still operates like it. If you only check there before placing an order, you're working with frozen data in a market that moves in real time. The platforms catching the live signal are the ones using recency weighting, AI quality filtering, and time-aware trust scores. Sources.to is the cleanest example right now but the principle matters more than any specific platform: stop trusting reviews that haven't been recalculated since the vendor changed.

sources.to

What's everyone else using to cross-check sources in 2026? Curious to see what the community has settled on.

u/Milesandcompiles — 1 day ago