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Strike Force Energy launches keto-friendly liquid packets with zero sugar

Strike Force Energy launched zero-sugar keto packets with 160 mg of caffeine and sucralose. The real test is whether they fuel keto, or just caffeine.

Nina Kowalski··2 min read
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Strike Force Energy launches keto-friendly liquid packets with zero sugar
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Strike Force Energy rolled out a keto-friendly liquid energy packet line in a July 6 press release, pitching the packs to low-carb consumers, restrictive dieters and anyone who wants a fast caffeine hit without sugar or calories. Each packet carries 160 milligrams of caffeine, putting the brand squarely in the grab-and-go energy lane while trying to wear keto credentials at the same time.

The formula leans on sucralose instead of sugar and adds taurine, potassium citrate and vitamins B3, B6 and B12. Strike Force says the packets are designed to let users "kick the can" by turning any drink into an energy drink, and the company says they dissolve instantly in water, soda or another beverage without stirring or shaking. That convenience pitch matters as much as the ingredient list for people who keep keto-friendly options in a bag, car cup holder or desk drawer.

For keto readers, the useful test is not the marketing phrase but the label logic. Zero sugar and zero calories are the headline claims, but the real question is whether the packet does anything a low-carb body actually needs, beyond supplying a stimulant. The 160-milligram caffeine dose is below the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's 400-milligram daily limit for most healthy adults, though it can stack quickly if coffee, tea or other pre-workout products are already in the mix.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

Strike Force launched the line in eight flavors, spanning original, citrus and fruit varieties, and is selling it in 10-count boxes, 30- and 40-count pouches and variety packs from 40 to 280 counts. A sample pack is also on offer. The company also has a caffeine-free hydration line, a sign that it knows the keto conversation is not only about energy, but also about fluids and electrolytes.

The broader business case is straightforward. Strike Force is betting on a category Fortune Business Insights says will grow from $83.31 billion in 2026 to $157.21 billion by 2034, with an 8.26% compound annual growth rate. North America held a 35.48% share in 2025, and Strike Force is trying to claim a slice of that market with a packet that promises convenience first and low-carb branding second.

Strike Force Energy was founded in 2015 and is based in Palmetto, Florida. The company traces its origin story to former Navy SEAL Sean Matson, and that military-style convenience has stayed baked into the brand: portable, compact and built for people who want energy without slowing down to mix a drink. For keto shoppers, the packet now has to earn its place on the shelf the old-fashioned way, by proving that it is more than just a stimulant with a low-carb label.

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