Your cart is empty
Free shipping on all US orders
Free shipping on all orders
Not all greens powders are created equal — and some aim to do everything at once. Green Vibrance by Vibrant Health is one of those brands that tries to pack a lot into a single product. But how does it compare to Field of Greens by BrickHouse Nutrition, which keeps its focus more targeted?
We sat down with Dr. Mike Kim, DO, MBA, Head doctor & formulator at BrickHouse Nutrition, to get a clear, no-spin comparison.
Green Vibrance is a multi-function formula. If you look at the label, it’s trying to hit multiple health goals in one go: digestion, immunity, liver health, skeletal support, and more. It includes:
Probiotics
Digestive enzymes
A handful of adaptogens
A liver support blend (milk thistle, etc.)
Calcium and other skeletal support ingredients
At first glance, that sounds impressive. But the question is: how much of each thing are you really getting?
According to Dr. Mike:
“They’re trying to do too much with the product… You’re not really quite sure what the focus is.”
*BrickHouse Nutrition Field of Greens Ingredients
By contrast, Field of Greens has a clear purpose: help people get more fruits and vegetables into their diet, period. It’s built around real, organic, whole produce — no synthetic vitamins, no extracts, and no “everything but the kitchen sink” approach.
Dr. Mike explained the difference like this:
“I’m not trying to hit bodily targets with the fruits and greens. We just know fruits and greens are good for you, and you should be consuming more of them.”
That simplicity is intentional. The product isn’t bloated with tiny amounts of everything. It’s about full servings of what most people are missing in their diets: real, organic fruits and vegetables.
One benefit afforded to Field of Greens because of our focus on organic fruits and veggies, is that we get to apply a nutrition facts label to our product rather than having to apply a supplement facts label
Green Vibrance, like many multi-function formulas, uses a supplement facts panel. That’s not inherently bad, but it often comes with proprietary blends and unclear dosages.
Dr. Mike noted:
“Some of these [Green Vibrance] blends are minimal. The digestive enzymes are minimal. They’ve added vitamins from unknown sources. Some organic ingredients, but not all.”
This lack of clarity makes it tough to assess what you're really getting — and how effective it is.
Green Vibrance is positioned more as a greens and vegetables product with very little fruit content. Field of Greens is a balanced blend of both fruits and vegetables, using dehydrated whole food powder (not just extracts or grasses).
Green Vibrance includes cereal grasses like wheat grass and barley grass, along with spirulina and chlorella — similar to other greens powders in structure. But the lack of fruits, and the fragmented dosing across various functions, makes it feel like it’s spreading itself too thin.
Dr. Mike summed it up:
“It’s very similar to AG1 in its approach. If you pulled apart the cereal grasses, it’s probably just organized differently, but the same general formula.”
Green Vibrance has very limited flavor options, and according to Dr. Mike, that’s because when a product tries to do everything, it’s hard to make it taste good.
“How do you add variety to a product that’s trying to hit everything? You can’t really do anything to it.”
Field of Greens, on the other hand, offers several flavor and function options, including:
Original
Raw (no sweeteners)
Energy blend (with coffee berry extract)
Immune blend (with adaptogens and mushrooms)
And taste is a huge focus.
“It had to taste good,” said Dr. Mike. “We formulated it so that people actually want to drink it.”
If you want a product that tries to cover a little bit of everything — digestion, probiotics, greens, skeletal support — Green Vibrance fits that mold.
But if you want to actually fill the gap of missing fruits and vegetables in your diet — in a form that tastes good, is transparent, and uses real, organic ingredients — Field of Greens is the clear winner.
Not everything needs to be multifunctional. Sometimes, focusing on one core goal — and doing it better than anyone else — is more than enough.