Creatine.Wiki launches as the first dedicated online encyclopedia for creatine

May 15 09:09 2025
Creatine.Wiki launches as the first dedicated online encyclopedia for creatine
Creatine.Wiki, a new open-access encyclopedia, launches as the first dedicated platform for comprehensive, peer-reviewed information on creatine, aiming to combat misinformation and centralize knowledge for researchers, athletes, and the public.

A new online encyclopedia, Creatine.Wiki, has officially launched, offering an open-access, collaboratively edited knowledge base dedicated entirely to creatine—one of the most widely studied and utilized compounds in sports science nutrition. The site aims to fill a critical gap in public information by providing a centralized, continuously updated, and verifiable resource on a subject often underserved or scattered across disparate sources.

Founded by John Castor, Creatine.Wiki is positioned as both a community-driven and expert-curated platform. “We noticed that mainstream informational sources often limit or generalize information about supplements like creatine, either due to editorial policies or notability thresholds. At the same time the social media sphere is overflowing with either misunderstood or outright dubious information about the underlying science. This project emerged from a need for a more specialized, open repository that prioritizes substance, accuracy, and most of all verifiability,” said Castor, who also oversees the site’s editorial board.

The site covers a wide spectrum of topics related to creatine—including its biochemical mechanisms, clinical applications, athletic usage, safety profile, and regulatory status—integrating peer-reviewed sources and links to external research. Creatine.Wiki welcomes user contributions globally, while maintaining strict editorial oversight through a panel of experienced reviewers to ensure scientific integrity and content quality.

Why a Creatine-Focused Encyclopedia?

Despite creatine’s widespread use and extensive clinical research—particularly in sports performance, neurology, and aging—authoritative, centralized information remains hard to access. Most general-purpose encyclopedias restrict detailed supplementation content due to editorial guidelines, the direct scientific literature is often too dense and uninterpretable to outsiders, while forums, blogs, and social media often propagate misinformation or unverified claims that do not align with the preponderance of the underlying scientific evidence.

Creatine.Wiki addresses this by allowing granular detail that would not meet notability standards elsewhere, provided it is well-sourced. Articles are continually updated with the latest developments, making the platform more dynamic than alternative sources. According to Castor, “We’re not here to promote the use of creatine, but to document it comprehensively—warts and all—so that users, researchers, and healthcare professionals can make informed decisions.”

Key Features of Creatine.Wiki:

Open Editing: Anyone can contribute, provided edits are based on verifiable published sources.

Expert Oversight: Volunteer editors and a panel of reviewers monitor content quality and accuracy.

– Multilingual Access: Articles are being translated into several languages to reach a broader audience.

– Transparency and Accountability: All contributions are tracked, and reversible, with clear editorial policies to avoid bias.

Specialized Depth: The encyclopedia includes niche and emerging topics that often go unaddressed elsewhere.

As of launch, the site includes over 200 articles ranging from creatine monohydrate pharmacokinetics to legal considerations in sports doping regulations. The project is currently soliciting contributors from both academic and practitioner communities, and future plans include bringing the site’s content to a wider international audience.

For more information or to contribute, visit https://creatine.wiki/

Media Contact
Company Name: Creatine.Wiki
Contact Person: John Castor
Email: Send Email
Country: United States
Website: https://creatine.wiki/