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subject: Therapeutix Reviews: Why Free Trials Mostly Lead to Scams [print this page]


Therapeutix Reviews: Why Free Trials Mostly Lead to Scams

You know the saying too good to be true'? Well that's the case with Therapeutix, an anti-acne cream that boasts of an auto-ship program and a free trial to its customers. It claims to be recommended by a famous doctor with shockingly good credentials who imply that this product is so good that it is the acne solution for the elites of Beverly Hills. As a result, users only get entangled in a web of false claims and charges by believing in this product that does not seem to have any intent or capability of causing any positive effects at all.

If you try to look for Therapeutix reviews in the internet, you will be shocked with the barrage of negative reviews you'll read. Most users feel cheated with the free trial offered by the product saying that this brand does not do as promise and simply leave their users unsatisfied. What's even worse is that you believe that the brand has a free trial but the truth is that it is only an auto bill scam which will continuously charge you for a product that you only have the intention of trying. Most Therapeutix reviews of users claim that this happened to them, causing them to lose a considerable amount of money for something that does not even work.

Basically, this brand is composed of three products namely the treatment, the cleanser, and the healing cream. The presence of the third product alone is already a negative loophole which you can commonly see in Therapeutix reviews. If the first two products are really doing their work, then there will be no more need for a cream to repair the skin. The second cause for the negative Therapeutix reviews is its plain incapability of working at all. It does not cause any positive effects on the acne problem, proving it to be just a waste of time, money, and effort.




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