What this world covers
Vitamins and minerals are the one world in biohacking where the question "does this work?" often has a clear answer. For magnesium, vitamin D, omega-3 and zinc we're not talking about two small studies from one specialty lab, but about hundreds of human studies, meta-analyses and Cochrane reviews. That is exactly why this world is the foundation of every stack: the ratio of evidence to cost to biological effect is best here.
The world covers the classic micronutrients: all 13 essential vitamins (A, B-complex, C, D, E, K), the major minerals (calcium, magnesium, sodium, potassium, phosphorus), the critical trace elements (iron, zinc, copper, selenium, iodine, chromium, manganese, molybdenum) as well as the essential fatty acids EPA and DHA. Not every micronutrient needs supplementation, but together they form the biochemical scaffolding without which no other lever can work.
Why the order matters
There is a pragmatic reason to start with this world — and it is not "because it's boring and you can check it off quickly." It's because many of the spectacular effects attributed to peptides, nootropics or longevity substances are in truth the correction of an unrecognized deficiency. Someone who has had vitamin D at 25–30 ng/ml for years and suddenly hits 50 ng/ml experiences an energy boost that gets sold as "the effect of NMN" — when it's primarily the D correction.
The principle is robust: The effect size of an intervention is inversely proportional to sufficiency in the status quo. Magnesium against sleep problems works strongly with magnesium deficiency — barely at all with sufficiency. Omega-3 against inflammation works dramatically on an omega-3-poor diet — marginally on a Mediterranean one. Anyone who doesn't check the basics chases effects that can't even happen in their own body.
The four big levers
Magnesium
Magnesium is a cofactor in more than 300 enzymatic reactions — from ATP synthesis to protein biosynthesis to muscle contraction. Deficiency symptoms range from cramps and sleep problems to cardiac arrhythmias. RDA: 300–400 mg/day, supplemental doses of 200–400 mg often useful on top. Form matters: bisglycinate or citrate, not oxide.
Strongest evidence for:
- Improved sleep quality when deficient (multiple meta-analyses)
- Reduced nocturnal calf cramps
- Migraine prophylaxis (400–600 mg/day)
- Blood pressure reduction of 2–4 mmHg on average
Vitamin D3
Vitamin D is technically a hormone — its receptor sits in almost every body cell. The evidence for bone health is overwhelming, for immune function, muscle strength and mood it is strong, for cancer- and mortality-reduction mixed. Standard dosing: 2000–4000 IU/day with fat, year-round north of the 40th parallel.
Synergy: Combine with vitamin K2 (MK-7) — K2 directs the calcium mobilized by D3 into bone instead of arteries. Standard combo: 4000 IU D3 + 100–200 µg K2 MK-7.
Omega-3 (EPA + DHA)
EPA and DHA are the only long-chain omega-3 fatty acids with direct biological action. They are incorporated into membrane lipids, influence inflammatory mediators and are structurally essential for brain and retina. Daily target: 2–3 g EPA+DHA, ideally with a low TOTOX value (oxidation index).
Strongest evidence for:
- Triglyceride reduction (dose-dependent, robust)
- Anti-inflammatory effects (CRP, IL-6)
- Brain health, especially in older age
- Mood in depressive symptoms (meta-analyses positive for EPA-dominant preparations)
Zinc
Zinc is a cofactor in more than 300 enzymes and essential for immune function, wound healing, testosterone synthesis, taste and smell. RDA: 8–11 mg, supplemental 15–25 mg/day. Over 40 mg/day long-term leads to copper deficiency — caution with chronic high-dose use.
How we rate evidence
In this world there is relative scientific clarity — but that doesn't mean every claim is equally well supported. On the platform we distinguish four tiers:
- Meta-analysis / Cochrane review — Highest evidence tier, aggregates dozens of RCTs
- Randomized controlled trial (RCT) — Gold standard for individual studies
- Observational / cohort study — Association, not causation
- Mechanistic / in vitro / animal — Hypothesis-generating, not action-guiding
A statement like "magnesium helps with sleep" has a different evidence density in this world than "magnesium improves insulin sensitivity in type-2 diabetics" — we make that difference explicitly visible.
Most common deficiencies in the population
European and US nutritional surveys (NVS II, NHANES, ENHIS) show consistent patterns:
- Vitamin D: 40–80% deficient depending on region and season
- Omega-3 index: >60% of the Western population in the suboptimal range (<8%)
- Magnesium: 20–30% below RDA, higher in athletes and under stress
- Zinc: 10–15% deficient, higher in vegetarians and older adults
- Iron: Women of childbearing age at 20–30% risk
- B12: Vegetarians/vegans almost always affected without supplementation
- Iodine: Germany and Austria are deficiency regions
These gaps are hard to predict individually without blood work — the stack-builder helps you generate a probability estimate based on diet log and lifestyle.
Synergies and antagonisms
Micronutrients interact — and that is often overlooked:
- Vitamin D + K2: D3 mobilizes calcium from the gut, K2 directs it into bone instead of soft tissue and arteries.
- Magnesium + vitamin D: D3 is converted to its active form 1,25(OH)2D by magnesium-dependent enzymes — a magnesium deficiency can render D supplementation effectively useless.
- Zinc + copper: Competitive absorption — high zinc doses displace copper.
- Calcium + iron + zinc: Compete for the same transporters — don't take simultaneously.
- Vitamin C + iron: Vitamin C increases the bioavailability of non-heme iron 2–4×.
- Omega-3 + vitamin E: High-dose omega-3 supplementation needs more oxidation protection — many preparations therefore contain small amounts of tocopherols.
What does NOT belong in this world
There is a clear boundary between World 01 and the worlds that follow:
- Nootropics like Lion's Mane or Bacopa → World 05 (Cognition)
- Peptides like BPC-157 → World 04 (Peptides)
- Sleep-specific substances like apigenin → World 08 (Sleep)
- Performance substrates like beta-alanine → World 07 (Performance)
Creatine sits in a special zone: technically a sports substrate (World 07), but because of its excellent safety and evidence profile often part of the basics. In our world logic it primarily belongs to performance, but shows up in the "basics for everyone" stack recommendation too.
How Biohacking AI operationalizes this
On the platform this world is more than a collection of substance profiles. Four concrete tools interlock:
- The Stack-Builder makes visible where your current stack has gaps — especially the ones you should not fill with another pill but through dietary adjustments.
- The Studies database is filtered: for every substance you see meta-analyses first, then the largest RCTs, then the rest — chronologically descending.
- The Forum for the basics world collects dose-and-effect experience reports — moderated, so no healing promises or affiliate spam get through.
- The Coach combines your stack, your diet log and optionally blood-test data into individualized dosing recommendations — with explicit uncertainty markers wherever evidence is thin.
The goal is not "more pills." The goal is: close the right gaps in the right doses with the right forms — and buy nothing else.