
The product is listed as “NPP Nutra Mass – 5.4 kg” in several Egyptian supplement shops.
According to one listing, each “serving” (2 scoops) provides a very high caloric intake: ~ 1,280 kcal, ~ 52 g protein, ~ 245 g carbohydrates, plus 3 g creatine monohydrate.
The manufacturer/retailers describe it as a “mass‑gainer” aimed at people who want to gain weight/size — suitable for “hard‑gainers”, people with fast metabolism, or those struggling to get enough calories from regular meals.
The mix is claimed to include a blend of proteins (whey concentrate / isolate / multiple absorption speeds), carbs (for calorie surplus and energy), and often added creatine + possibly vitamins/minerals (depending on version) to support muscle growth & recovery.
The product’s target: weight gain, bulk/size increase, muscle mass, especially for those with high calorie needs or difficulty eating enough.
From the public listing:
| Per Serving (as per seller — 2 scoops) | Claimed Amount |
|---|---|
| Calories | ~ 1,280 kcal |
| Protein | ~ 52 g |
| Carbohydrates | ~ 245 g |
| Creatine (added) | ~ 3 g monohydrate per “serving” |
Because of these macros, this is clearly a heavy, high‑calorie “bulking” mass‑gainer — designed to give a large calorie surplus + usable protein for muscle growth/weight gain.
Retail packaging claims a tub weight of 5.4 kg for “NPP Nutra Mass”.
This kind of mass‑gainer might be helpful if:
You have a fast metabolism or are hard to bulk — struggle to eat enough calories via normal meals.
You want to gain weight and muscle mass quickly — especially if you do resistance training / bodybuilding / heavy workouts.
You need a simple and convenient “calorie + protein shake” to supplement your diet when you can’t have enough big meals.
You’re in a “bulking” phase, not worrying too much about clean / lean weight — aim is size + mass gain first.
In other words: for people who find it hard to meet high caloric demands with ordinary food, or for those during intense bulk cycles, this product could help facilitate the required surplus.
The calorie and carb content is very high per serving. If you don’t match it with regular, intense training + balanced nutrition, many of these calories may convert to fat rather than lean muscle.
As with most mass‑gainers: it’s a supplement, not a substitute. Should complement a diet of real foods (proteins, healthy fats, fiber, micronutrients), not replace them.
The macro ratio leans heavily on carbs — that means high energy but lower protein-to-calorie ratio than pure protein powders. So “lean mass + minimal fat” might be harder to achieve than with a leaner mass‑gainer or whey.
If you have digestion issues — heavy shakes with a lot of carbs may be harder on the stomach / digestion (some people find mass‑gainers heavy).
You must be consistent with training, rest, hydration — otherwise you risk just gaining “bulk” (fat + water) more than actual lean muscle.