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	<title>Pet Food Score - Petfood Advisor</title>
	<subtitle>Pet Food Social Netword</subtitle>
	<link href="https://pet-food-score.eu/index.php" />
	<updated>2026-05-21T15:54:57+00:00</updated>

	<author><name><![CDATA[Pet Food Score - Petfood Advisor]]></name></author>
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		<author><name><![CDATA[petfood advisor]]></name></author>
		<updated>2026-05-21T15:54:57+00:00</updated>

		<published>2026-05-21T15:54:57+00:00</published>
		<id>https://pet-food-score.eu/viewtopic.php?p=50#p50</id>
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		<title type="html"><![CDATA[Re: How do Petfood Advisor tools compare to a Nutri-Score?]]></title>

		
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Hello Emily,<br><br>This is an excellent question because, at first glance, Petfood Advisor tools may appear similar to Nutri-Score systems. Both display nutritional information and compare products. However, the philosophy behind them is fundamentally different.<br><br>A traditional Nutri-Score approach tries to reduce a product to a final universal grade such as A, B, C, D, or E. The problem is that pet nutrition is not universal.<br><br>Dogs and cats do not all have the same needs:<br><br>* age,<br>* breed,<br>* activity level,<br>* sterilization status,<br>* digestive sensitivity,<br>* medical conditions,<br>* lifestyle,<br>* feeding frequency,<br>* and even owner objectives can completely change how a food should be interpreted.<br><br>Because of this complexity, a single simplified score may create the illusion of certainty where uncertainty actually exists.<br><br>Petfood Advisor tools are designed differently.<br><br>The objective is not to “decide for the consumer,” but to provide measurable and transparent information that helps owners better understand what they are buying.<br><br>For example, instead of saying:<br>“This kibble is A-rated therefore it is good,”<br><br>Petfood Advisor may display:<br><br>* analytical constituents,<br>* estimated carbohydrate levels,<br>* dry matter calculations,<br>* calcium/phosphorus ratios,<br>* ingredient positioning,<br>* feeding context,<br>* or product comparisons.<br><br>This allows consumers to interpret the information according to their own animal and situation.<br><br>Another important difference is that many Nutri-Score style systems rely heavily on hidden formulas or arbitrary weighting systems that are not always transparent. Two different websites may analyze the exact same product and produce completely different grades.<br><br>Petfood Advisor prefers an approach based on visible data and critical interpretation rather than opaque algorithms.<br><br>The philosophy is closer to:<br>“Here are the measurable elements. Here is the context. Now let’s understand what they may mean.”<br><br>This distinction is very important because nutrition science contains nuance, limitations, and uncertainties. Simplified grades can sometimes encourage emotional reactions instead of thoughtful analysis.<br><br>Petfood Advisor also recognizes another reality:<br>label information itself is not always perfectly reliable or complete. Analytical values may vary, formulations may change, and some online classifications continue circulating for years without updates.<br><br>That is why the platform focuses more on education, transparency, comparison tools, and critical thinking than on creating a viral “Top 10 best kibble” culture.<br><br>Simple scores are attractive because they are fast and reassuring.<br><br>Understanding nutrition is slower, more complex, but ultimately far more useful for responsible decision-making.<br><br>Thank you again for bringing up such an important topic.<dl class="file"><dt class="attach-image"><img src="https://pet-food-score.eu/download/file.php?id=43" class="postimage" alt="Why does Petfood Advisor refuse to rate kibble A-B-C-D-E while influencers do 3.jpg" onclick="viewableArea(this);" /></dt></dl><p>Statistics: Posted by <a href="https://pet-food-score.eu/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&amp;u=2">petfood advisor</a> — Thu May 21, 2026 3:54 pm</p><hr />
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		<author><name><![CDATA[j.channasse]]></name></author>
		<updated>2026-05-21T15:51:42+00:00</updated>

		<published>2026-05-21T15:51:42+00:00</published>
		<id>https://pet-food-score.eu/viewtopic.php?p=49#p49</id>
		<link href="https://pet-food-score.eu/viewtopic.php?p=49#p49"/>
		<title type="html"><![CDATA[How do Petfood Advisor tools compare to a Nutri-Score?]]></title>

		
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I have another question after exploring several Petfood Advisor tools and comparison tables.<br><br>How do Petfood Advisor tools actually differ from the popular Nutri-Score style systems used by many influencers and websites?<br><br>At first glance, both seem to compare products and display nutritional information. However, after reading the forum discussions, I get the impression that Petfood Advisor focuses more on interpretation and transparency rather than giving a final “good” or “bad” grade.<br><br>Does Petfood Advisor aim to help consumers analyze data themselves instead of replacing their judgment with a simplified score?<br><br>I also noticed that some tools focus on measurable information like analytical constituents, estimated carbohydrates, dry matter values, calcium/phosphorus ratios, ingredients, or feeding context rather than emotional marketing claims.<br><br>So what is the real philosophy behind the Petfood Advisor approach compared to a classic Nutri-Score system?<br><br>I would love to understand the difference more clearly because many pet owners are searching for simple answers online, while nutrition seems much more nuanced in reality.<br><br>Emily<p>Statistics: Posted by <a href="https://pet-food-score.eu/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&amp;u=58">j.channasse</a> — Thu May 21, 2026 3:51 pm</p><hr />
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