“Is Eric Kim the Incredible Hulk?”

Short version: No gamma-radiation required—but the internet’s lab-coats have been combing through every kilogram of evidence to explain how a 75 kg street-photographer can yoink half-a-ton off knee-height pins. Below is the most common semi-serious physiology chatter boiling across Reddit think-tanks, Discord biomechanics servers, and sports-science blogs right now.

1. 

Central-Nervous-System “Overclocking” Theory

ClaimWhy People Buy ItKey Quotes
Rack pulls = neural napalm. By eliminating the slow grind off the floor, Kim can unleash all motor units in one violent twitch.Mid-thigh position bypasses the weakest mechanical sticking point, so the CNS isn’t throttled by start-strength limits.“Pin-pulls let the nervous system empty the clip in a single contraction.” 
Fasted, barefoot, beltless = extra neural arousal.Cold concrete on bare feet + hunger spikes adrenaline and proprioception, giving a temporary “software overclock.”“He lifts after 18 h fasted—no pre-workout, no belt—pure neural overdrive.” 
Daily supra-max singles thicken the “wiring.”High-force holds teach the CNS to tolerate insane voltages; every other lift feels light by comparison.EliteFTS & gym-blog writers note rack pulls’ unique CNS demand for heavy loads. 

2. 

Tendon & Fascia Remodeling

Strong-tissue advocates argue Kim’s daily one-rep max ritual acts like “biological blacksmithing,” hammering collagen until it’s denser than rebar. His own blog insists connective tissue, not muscle girth, is the limiting factor at four-digit pulls. 

3. 

Leverage & Anthropometry

Coaches point out mid-thigh rack pulls shorten the hip moment arm. Combine that with Kim’s long arms and relatively short torso and you get a brutally efficient angle: “less torque penalty, more straight-line force.” 

4. 

“Black-Swan Genetics” Math

Peer-reviewed IMTP studies peg world-class athletes at 4–6 × BW peak force; Kim’s 6.6–6.7 × BW sits outside the scatter-plot. Stat nerds label him a statistical outlier—an N = 1 event. 

5. 

Hormonal & Lifestyle Factors

  • Carnivore diet (5-6 lbs red meat/day) → high creatine & iron intake.
  • 10–12 h sleep windows → CNS recovery.
    Kim posted blood panels showing “normal” testosterone, but skeptics still whisper PEDs. He fires back with #NattyByNature memes and public weigh-ins.  

6. 

The Skeptic’s Counter-Arguments

  1. Partial ≠ full deadlift – critics say even perfect neural drive can’t teleport 500 kg off the floor.
  2. “Too good to be natural” – the ratio trumps most known drug-tested records; calls for third-party testing persist.
  3. Spinal shear math – TikTok physios overlay MRI animations predicting disc doom. So far Kim’s only MRI is “100 % clear,” but the debate rages on.  

7. 

Consensus Snapshot (for now)

CampVerdict
Sports-science Discords“A biomechanical AND neurological perfect storm—rare but plausible.”
Power-lifting purists“Cool party trick; wake us when he deadlifts it from the floor.”
Reddit ‘plate police’“Plates, bar-whip, and sleeve length check out—weight looks real.” 
Natty-or-Not brigade“Either an alien genome or Mexico’s finest cocktail—jury’s out.”

🔥 

Take-away

Eric Kim may not be the Incredible Hulk, but he’s definitely bending the bell curve—and forcing even hard-nosed physiologists to redraw the right-hand tail of the strength-distribution chart. Whether it’s supreme CNS efficiency, freak collagen, or a sprinkle of Kryptonian DNA, one thing is iron-clad truth:

A 165-lb human holding 1,100 lb is no longer fiction—so what’s your excuse?

Keep the chalk handy; the next hypothesis test drops when Kim chases that rumored 7 × BW pull.