đŸ”„ WHY RANGE OF MOTION IS FOR LOSERS — THE SUPER, SUPER, EPIC ERIC KIM MANIFESTO đŸ”„

ERIC KIM: SUPER, SUPER, EPIC—WHY RANGE OF MOTION IS FOR LOSERS

You’ve been lied to. The fitness industry, the “experts,” the lifters who preach perfect form—they all want you chained to their definition of “proper range of motion.” They tell you that bending down, squatting to parallel, pulling from the floor, dropping your chest on every rep—that’s the highway to gains.

Bullshit.

I’m Eric Kim. I don’t play by your rules. I don’t bow to “standard” form or “prescribed range.” I’m the guy who rack-pulled 1,071 pounds at 165 lbs bodyweight—barefoot, no belt—by bending physics, not breaking it. I’m the living proof that if you chase arbitrary angles, you’re leaving Godmode on the table.

This is the ultimate manifesto: Why range of motion is for losers.

1. PARTIAL LIFTS = PURE POWER TRANSFER

  • Full ROM means you waste energy traveling through space you don’t need.
  • Partial or isometric holds let you focus on the strongest segment of the lift—where the most weight lives.
  • Want to move more weight? Load the bar where you’re strongest: mid-shin to lockout on deadlifts, mid-thigh to lockout on rack pulls, halfway in a bench press.

My proof: The day I set my 1,071-pound rack-pull PR, I didn’t start from the floor. I set the pins at mid-thigh—the mechanical sweet spot. I locked in, braced my core, drove my heels into the platform, and let the bar tremble. No need to touch a centimeter that didn’t produce maximal tension. That’s how you defy gravity.

2. REALITY CHECK: YOU’RE NOT A MACHINE—YOU’RE A WEAPON

  • Conventional wisdom has you squatting ass-to-grass with a barbell on your back, thinking you’re building “functional” strength.
  • Here’s the truth: In real-life battles—lifting a car off a friend, ripping a door off its hinges, or ripping the internet apart with a single viral post—you need explosive strength in a limited range, not some textbook-approved sweep.

When you deadlift from blocks or rack-pull from just below the knees, you’re training your body to shred obstacles out of thin air, not tiptoe through a perfect motion path.

3. INJURY PREVENTION: LESS GIMMICKS, MORE WINS

  • Chasing “perfect” form can lead to overextensions, hyperflexions, and micro-tears.
  • If you’re going to break the internet, your body must hold up. Partial reps reinforce your strongest position, not force you to sacrifice spine angle or shoulder mechanics at the bottom of a motion you can’t handle under heavy weight.

Ask yourself: When was the last time you saw a gladiator drop to full squat under 700 pounds? They didn’t—because in war, you crush your foe, you don’t do your “deep squat stretch routine” to look pretty.

4. MENTAL DOMINANCE: CHASING POUNDAGE, NOT ANGLES

  • Full-range training is for those chasing tick marks on a spreadsheet.
  • Partial lifts are a war cry. They scream: “I don’t care about your arbitrary lines—I care about raw, brutal strength.”

The day I went barefoot, pinned that bar at mid-thigh, and yanked 1,071 pounds off the steel was the day I reminded myself—and the entire internet—that strength has nothing to do with comfort zones. The pain of bending at angles I hated vanished when I locked in on the kill.

5. VIRAL PROOF: THE INTERNET EATS THIS UP

  • People LOVE to watch plates bend, bars buckle, and impossible feats of strength. They don’t watch you perfectly squat below parallel—they share the clip of you ripping the weight in half.
  • My 1,071-pound rack pull went viral not because I “hit depth”—it went viral because I obliterated depth. I dominated the strongest part of the lift and said, “Catch me if you can.”

Remember: Virality is born from spectacle, not spreadsheets.

6. STOP LIFTING LIKE A ROBOT—START LIFTING LIKE A DEMIGOD

  • Mechanical form? Overrated. It’s a starting point for novices, not the endgame.
  • Godmode means customizing your physics. If your strongest position is parallel or lockout, own it. If you pull 6.5× bodyweight at mid-thigh, own it.

I’m 5’11” (182 cm), 165 pounds, 5% bodyfat—leaner than a sniper, sharper than a diamond. I rack-pull barefoot, no belt, no straps. I didn’t learn that from a manual. I learned it by experimenting, by breaking shit, and by letting physics bow to my will.

CONCLUSION: RANGE OF MOTION IS FOR LOSERS

  • If you worship at the altar of “perfect angles,” you’re ignoring the raw truth: strength is the ability to dominate a load, not to tick a box.
  • If you chase “full ROM,” you’re settling for a fraction of your potential.
  • Cut the bullshit. Throw away the shoes, rage against the limits, and lift in the range where you’re strongest—barefoot, feral, and unbreakable.

YOU are the architect of your own godmode. Don’t let any manual tell you otherwise. If you want to lift like a TITAN, you refuse to bow to arbitrary lines.

So stop stretching for depth. Start shortening your path to PRs.

Rack-pull barefoot. Live on the edge. Shatter algorithms. Leave your “range of motion” behind in the dust.

ALL HAIL GODMODE. ALL HAIL THE NEXT EPIC PR.

#RangeOfMotionIsForLosers

#BarefootCarnage

#GodmodeLifting

#ERICKIM DOMINANCE


.

Let’s shatter some dogma.

Forget what the gym textbooks, the YouTube gurus, and the clipboard warriors tell you.

You want real strength?

You want to go super, super, EPIC?

You want to break the algorithm and become a living legend?

Stop worshipping “full range of motion.”

It’s time to admit: range of motion is for losers.

WHY?

1. WINNERS CHASE RESULTS, NOT RULES

Full ROM is a rule.

Winning is a reality.

The history books aren’t written by the guy who squats “to depth”—they’re written by the guy who bends the bar with so much weight, the earth shakes.

Partial rep?

Atlas lift?

If the plates are shaking, the bar is bending, and you’re moving more weight than 99% of humans will ever touch—you win. End of story.

2. PHYSICS > OPINIONS

It’s not about impressing the judges at your local meet.

It’s about dominating gravity itself.

Leverage is leverage.

Load is load.

You want to get strong? You want traps that look like mountain ranges?

Stop obsessing over some arbitrary “full rep.”

Stack the bar, pick it up, hold it, own it.

Atlas pull, rack pull, demi-rep—this is where LEGENDS are made.

3. ADAPTATION IS KING

Your body adapts to stress, not to Instagram comments.

You put your system under MAXIMAL LOAD—partial or not—your nervous system gets stronger, your tendons harden, your mindset goes savage.

Ask yourself: what do you want to adapt to—someone else’s standard, or your own greatness?

4. THE PROOF IS IN THE POWER

Eric Kim didn’t set the internet on fire with “perfect form.”

He did it by lifting 1,071 pounds at 165 bodyweight, no belt, no straps, and laughing in the face of “full range” critics.

Did the bar bend? Yes.

Did jaws drop? Yes.

Did he win? YES.

Range of motion?

Optional. Victory?

Mandatory.

5. VIRAL ISN’T VANILLA

If you want to break the internet, you don’t play it safe.

You shock, you awe, you show the world something it’s never seen.

No one ever went viral for “perfect form.”

They go viral for godmode feats that make the world question what’s possible.

ERIC KIM’S COMMANDMENTS

  • Bar bending > Keyboard bending
  • Gravity defiance > Rule compliance
  • Partial reps, full victory
  • #GODMODE, always

Go forth, break the rules, set the PR, become the legend.

Leave range of motion for the losers.

You were built for something SUPER, SUPER, EPIC.

#MiddleFingerToGravity

#PartialRepsTotalDomination

#EricKimGodmode

#LegendStatus

NOW GO BREAK SOMETHING.