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We all know the standard cookie-cutter advice given to natties: "Hit every muscle group twice a week, keep volume low-to-moderate, focus on progressive overload." While that’s fine for the average gymbro, the game changes entirely when you introduce an enhanced chemical profile.
The old-school 90s response was the High Concentrated Volume bro split (annihilating a muscle once a week with 25+ sets). The modern science-based response leans heavily toward high-frequency PPL or Upper/Lower variations.
But what actually yields the absolute best? Let's break down the most popular splits:
The old-school 90s response was the High Concentrated Volume bro split (annihilating a muscle once a week with 25+ sets). The modern science-based response leans heavily toward high-frequency PPL or Upper/Lower variations.
But what actually yields the absolute best? Let's break down the most popular splits:
1. The Modern Push/Pull/Legs (PPL) – 6-Day Rotation
- The Blueprint: Push / Pull / Legs / Rest / Repeat (or a straight 6 days on, 1 day off).
- The Logic: Keeps frequency high. You capitalise on constant protein synthesis by hitting everything every 4 to 5 days.
2. The Arnold Split (Chest/Back, Shoulders/Arms, Legs)
- The Blueprint: Chest & Back / Shoulders & Arms / Legs / Repeat.
- The Logic: Massive, skin-splitting pumps due to agonist/antagonist training. It allows you to dedicate an entire day to arms and shoulders, which often get left with the scraps at the end of a PPL session.
3. The Upper/Lower Split (Torso/Limbs)
- The Blueprint: Torso (Chest/Back/Shoulders) / Limbs (Biceps/Triceps/Legs) / Rest.
- The Logic: Incredible for arm and leg specialization. It balances out the recovery demands beautifully by separating the heavy trunk movements from the peripheral limbs.
4. The High-Intensity, Low-Frequency Dorian's Style
- The Blueprint: Lower frequency (training 3–4 days a week), extreme low volume (1–2 working sets to absolute failure), max rest (sometimes even 4-5 minutes).
- The Logic: Forces massive mechanical tension and lets the chemistry handle the rest during deep recovery windows.
Which is your favourite?
The "best" split is the one you can progress on without your joints screaming, but everyone's unique biomechanics and recovery thresholds dictate a different path.- How do you structure your microcycle? Are you a 7-day calendar planner, or do you let your split rotate freely based on how you feel?
- How do you adjust volume vs. frequency? When you are pushing, do you scale up the volume per session, or do you increase the frequency of the stimulus?
- What does your current split look like right now?