Plasmaphire
A battery-powered, portable pair of plasma spheres (2,500 EUR) explicitly marketed by its own maker as 'experimental' and unable to make medical claims — designed for use away from mains power, including outdoors.
- The seller states Plasmaphire's battery operation allows it to reach 'sub-20Hz, even sub-10Hz' frequencies not achievable on AC power, which the maker considers important for the intended effect.
- The product page directly quotes the maker acknowledging 'live blood cell trials' comparable to Theraphi — described as informal comparative testing, not a controlled or published study.
- A named user (Cristina, Andorra, Jan 2024) reports 'great relief' from cold symptoms during two weeks of use — a single self-reported case, not a study.
- The product's own disclaimer states explicitly: 'Plasmaphire is experimental and does not / cannot make medical claims' — a direct, checkable statement of the seller's own legal position.
The page cites an anecdote about Bob Beck generating a 'wave of euphoria' by waving a statically-charged pen at ~8Hz, used to argue for the importance of low-voltage, low-frequency exposure. Presented as anecdote, not as a study.
Named collaborator and app developer credited with the software driving the device.
EVERY SOURCE IS NAMED SO YOU CAN VERIFY IT YOURSELF. NAMING A SOURCE IS NOT ENDORSING IT.
- What did the 'live blood cell trials' referenced on the product page actually measure, and were they published or reviewed by anyone outside the maker's team?
- Given the seller's own disclaimer that no medical claims are made, how should the testimonial-driven health language elsewhere on the same page be read?
Plasmaphire is the most explicitly self-limiting product in the Implosion Group line — its own disclaimer is more direct than PhiRay's or PhireCrystal's about not making medical claims, which is worth noting as a point of relative caution from the maker's own side.
It ships from Belgium (distinct from PhiRay's California shipping), suggesting a genuinely distributed, multi-node production setup rather than one central operation.
SOURCE: plasmaphire.com (scraped 2026-07-09)
What do the 'live blood cell trials' referenced on the page actually consist of, and can they be viewed?
Not published or linked from the product page as of this research date — the Atlas is tracking for a direct source.
Report from the field →PhiRay
A $6,900 plasma-and-magnetic-field device marketed as the direct replacement for the maker's earlier Theraphi system — claimed to be 2–4x more powerful at roughly a quarter of the cost.
Piezo Phire
The most affordable device in the Implosion Group line (700 EUR) — a piezo-based localized 'implosive charge' unit launched at the maker's own FractalU conference.
Science and Alchemy of Consciousness (France)
A real, currently-running annual multi-day conference and retreat — its 5th year in 2025 — bringing the Implosion Group's device makers, theorists, and practitioners together at one venue for lectures, device demonstrations, and communal meals.