Review · Men's Health
Rockdick Ebooks - Enlarge Penis Naturally In 4 Mon
A $1 bundle of unproven penis exercise PDFs. The financial risk is near zero, but the time commitment and false hope are the real costs.
Skeptic read
Avoid2.5/10
A $1 bundle of unproven penis exercise PDFs. The financial risk is near zero, but the time commitment and false hope are the real costs.
- Price checked
- $1
- Dose visibility
- Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
- Main risk
- No clinical evidence that penis enlargement exercises work
- Better use case
- The morbidly curious who want to see what a $1 penis exercise program looks like
- Skip if
- You're hoping for real, measurable results — the science isn't there
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What Rockdick Ebooks is, in one sentence.
A $1 bundle of six PDFs that promise penis enlargement through 40 minutes of daily exercises and qigong over four months, sold on ClickBank. Refund: 60 days, ClickBank-honored.
The price is so low it’s a rounding error. That low price is doing all the conversion work — and it’s likely a front-end for upsells that the vendor doesn’t surface until after you buy. The product page is sparse, the claims are unsubstantiated, and the whole thing smells like a men’s-health insecurity play dressed up as Eastern wellness.
What you actually get
Six digital files, likely formatted as PDFs:
- “Exercising The Penis” ebook. The main manual. From the title, it’s probably a jelqing and stretching guide — the same exercise protocols that have been circulating online for free since the early 2000s.
- Five “Penis Qigong Tutorials.” Five separate PDFs that frame penis exercises as qigong — energy work, breath control, and visualization layered on top of physical manipulation. The qigong angle is the product’s only differentiator from the hundreds of free jelqing guides on the internet.
- No videos, no coaching, no community. The listing mentions only books. If you’re expecting video demonstrations, you’ll be disappointed.
The total page count is unknown, but at $1, you’re getting a handful of ebooks that were likely assembled from public-domain or repurposed content. The qigong framing might be original, but the underlying exercises are not.
How the marketing oversells
The sales page is thin — just a ClickBank catalog listing with a short blurb. The oversell is in the promise itself: “enlarge penis naturally in 4 months.” That’s a medical claim, and it’s unsupported by any clinical evidence. No randomized controlled trial has shown that manual exercises produce permanent, measurable increases in penile length or girth. The few studies that exist on jelqing show inconsistent, small changes at best, often within measurement error, and always accompanied by risk of injury — bruising, nerve damage, erectile dysfunction.
The “40 minutes per day” commitment is also an oversell in disguise. It implies that if you just put in the time, you’ll get the result. That’s the logic of a workout program applied to an organ that isn’t a muscle. The penis is not a bicep; it doesn’t hypertrophy from resistance training. The marketing knows this but counts on you not knowing it.
The qigong framing adds a layer of mystique. It suggests an ancient, holistic approach, but there’s no traditional Chinese medicine lineage that includes penis enlargement as a goal. This is modern marketing borrowing the language of qi to sell an insecurity fix.
How it tells you to use it
The blurb says 40 minutes per day for 4 months. That’s roughly 80 hours of exercise over 120 days. The instructions likely involve a combination of jelqing (milking motions), stretching, and qigong breathing. The qigong tutorials probably add visualization and energy circulation techniques.
If you follow the program, you’ll be spending nearly an hour a day on an unproven routine. The time cost is real. The psychological cost — focusing daily on a perceived inadequacy — is also real. The financial cost is negligible, but the opportunity cost is not.
What it costs and how the refund works
$1 one-time at the front-end checkout. No recurring billing surfaced in the catalog data. The vendor may offer upsells after purchase; we didn’t test the funnel, but at this price point, it’s almost certain.
Refund: 60 days, ClickBank-honored. You can email ClickBank support with your order ID and get your dollar back within a week. For $1, the refund process isn’t worth the time it takes to write the email. The vendor is counting on you not bothering.
Where the marketing oversells (the specific lines)
The entire sales pitch is one line: “Enlarge Penis Naturally In 4 Months.” That’s the headline and the promise. It’s an absolute claim with no qualifiers, no citations, no mechanism. It’s the kind of claim that would require FDA clearance if it were a pill or device. Because it’s an ebook, it slips through the cracks.
The “75% commission” note in the catalog is an affiliate recruitment number. It tells you the vendor gives affiliates 75% of the $1 sale — so 75 cents. That’s next to nothing, which means few promoters bother with a $1 product unless there are paid add-ons waiting behind the checkout. The fact that the vendor is still listing it suggests there might be back-end sales, but as a buyer, you don’t see that until after you hand over your email.
Who should buy, who should skip
Buy this if you’re curious about penis exercise protocols and want a structured, cheap introduction — with the full understanding that the exercises are unproven and carry risk of injury. If you’re going to try jelqing anyway, $1 for a curated set of instructions is less dangerous than piecing together forum advice, but it’s still not safe.
Skip this if you’re hoping for real, measurable results. The evidence isn’t there. Skip this if you’re struggling with body image issues — this product is designed to monetize that struggle, not resolve it. Skip this if you value your time at more than a penny an hour.
The honest read
Rockdick Ebooks is a $1 tripwire product. The price is a psychological trick: it’s so low you don’t think twice, and then you’re in the funnel. The content is almost certainly a rehash of free jelqing guides with some qigong language sprinkled on top. The exercises are unproven, the time commitment is substantial, and the medical consensus is that manual penis enlargement doesn’t work and can cause harm.
The only thing this product has going for it is the price. But even at a dollar, you’re not buying a solution — you’re buying a promise that preys on insecurity. The refund is real, but you’ll probably forget you bought it. And that’s exactly how the vendor makes money.
Is Rockdick Ebooks worth it?
No — at $1 the money is trivial, but the exercises are unproven and the 80-hour time cost is the real price. Refund: 60 days, ClickBank-honored.
Skip it if you want measurable results: no high-quality evidence shows manual exercises permanently enlarge the penis, and jelqing carries genuine injury risk. The only honest reason to buy is morbid curiosity, and even then you’re funding an insecurity play.
— Rhett Calder
Here's what I'd actually do
If you have read the ingredient panel above, the clinical-trial doses make sense to you, and you understand this is a supplement and not a treatment:
Rockdick Ebooks - Enlarge Penis Naturally In 4 Mon is one of the few in this category I would not actively steer a friend away from. The formula is honest about what it is, and the page does not ask you to take anything on faith you cannot read on the label.
Don't buy this if: Do not buy this if you take any prescription that interacts with the active ingredients above. The interactions on this label are real, not precautionary — ask a pharmacist before you start.
— Dr. Rhett Calder · Internal medicine, retired (MD, board-certified 1989–2023)
Sources and review method
Supplement Skeptic reviews compare the visible label and sales claims against published research, dose ranges used in human studies, safety guidance, checkout terms, and refund mechanics. This page is not medical advice.
- Vendor sales page — ClickBank-listed sales page (active as of catalog import)
Frequently asked questions
- Is Rockdick Ebooks a scam?
- Not in the sense that you won't receive the files. You'll get the PDFs. But the central claim — that these exercises permanently enlarge the penis — is unsupported by evidence and contradicted by medical consensus. It's a legal scam: they deliver the product, but the product doesn't do what it says.
- What do I actually get when I buy?
- Six PDFs: one main exercise guide and five qigong tutorials. No videos, no coaching, no community access. The total page count is unknown, but at $1, don't expect a textbook.
- Does the 60-day refund work for a $1 product?
- Yes, ClickBank will refund your dollar if you email them within 60 days. For most people, the time it takes to request the refund is worth more than the dollar. The vendor counts on that.
- Will these exercises actually enlarge my penis?
- No. There is no high-quality evidence that manual exercises produce permanent, clinically significant increases in penile size. Temporary changes from swelling are possible, but that's not enlargement — that's edema.