137x Here
The original site uses "1337" to spell out "LEET" (elite) in old-school hacker leetspeak.
This specific number comes from a 2003 university study comparing a specific high-grade matcha to a low-grade commercial green tea. While slightly exaggerated for marketing, it remains the gold-standard buzzword for the matcha industry. 🔭 3. The Cosmos: Stargazing Sweet Spot The original site uses "1337" to spell out
Wellness advocates frequently state that matcha contains up to 137 times more antioxidants (specifically the catechin EGCG) than standard, bag-steeped green tea. 🔭 3
From digital subcultures and wellness science to high-stakes finance and deep-space exploration, the number 137 followed by an "x" serves as a bizarrely consistent benchmark of extremes. 💻 1. The Internet Underground: A Typo in the Pirate Seas 💻 1
For amateur astronomers and astrophotographers gazing at the night sky, "137x" is a recurring focal sweet spot.
In internet culture, "137x" is most famously recognized as the frequent typo for the massive torrenting directory 1337x .