How Monster Beverage built a $500M+ fitness energy brand from scratch, survived a bitter trademark war with Bang Energy, and expanded the Reign universe with Storm — all to dominate the performance-drink aisle.
Reign Total Body Fuel is a performance-oriented energy drink launched in March 2019 by Monster Beverage Corporation — the $60B+ beverage giant behind Monster Energy, the world's second-largest energy drink brand. Reign was Monster's strategic answer to the explosive growth of fitness-positioned energy drinks, specifically targeting the same gym-goer demographic that propelled Bang Energy to nearly 10% U.S. market share.
Each 16 oz can of Reign delivers 300mg of caffeine, zero sugar, zero calories, BCAAs, CoQ10, and electrolytes — a formula designed to sit in the gym bag, not the gamer's desk. The brand has since expanded with Reign Storm (a lighter, 200mg caffeine wellness-positioned line launched in 2022) and Reign Inferno (a thermogenic variant), creating a multi-tier portfolio under the Reign umbrella.
Reign's launch immediately triggered a trademark infringement lawsuit from VPX Sports (Bang Energy's parent), which alleged Monster had deliberately copied Bang's trade dress. Monster won the trade dress case in 2021 and subsequently acquired Bang itself out of bankruptcy in 2023 for $362M — an ironic conclusion to the rivalry that defined Reign's early years.
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Parent Company | Monster Beverage Corporation (NASDAQ: MNST) |
| Launch Date | March 2019 |
| Headquarters | Corona, California, USA |
| Product Lines | Reign Total Body Fuel, Reign Storm, Reign Inferno |
| Can Size | 16 oz (Total Body Fuel / Inferno), 12 oz (Storm) |
| Caffeine | 300mg (Total Body Fuel), 200mg (Storm) |
| Sugar | Zero across all lines |
| Calories | 0–10 per can |
| Key Ingredients | BCAAs, CoQ10, Electrolytes, B-Vitamins |
| Sweetener | Sucralose |
| Markets | North America, South America, Europe |
| Target Demo | Gym-goers, fitness enthusiasts, athletes (18–34) |
| Key Partnerships | Chelsea FC Women, Harlequin FC, Association of Pickleball Players |
| Distribution | Coca-Cola Bottling system (via Monster's KO partnership) |
By 2018, Monster Beverage had a problem. While its flagship green-clawed cans still dominated convenience store coolers, a new wave of fitness-focused energy drinks — led by Bang Energy — was eating into its growth. Bang had captured roughly 9% of the U.S. energy drink market by positioning itself as the "gym bro's" choice: high caffeine, zero sugar, with pseudo-scientific ingredients like "Super Creatine." Monster needed a direct response.
Enter Reign Total Body Fuel, launched in Q1 2019 with an unmistakable mandate: go head-to-head with Bang in the performance energy segment. The branding was bold, the formula was aggressive (300mg caffeine, BCAAs, CoQ10), and the distribution was immediate — leveraging Monster's existing relationship with Coca-Cola's bottling network to hit shelves nationwide within weeks.
Reign's launch was barely a month old when VPX Sports, Bang's parent company, filed suit alleging trademark infringement, trade dress infringement, and unfair competition. VPX claimed Reign's can design, name, and marketing were deliberately designed to confuse consumers. The legal battle became one of the most closely watched in beverage industry history.
Key milestones in the legal saga:
Reign Total Body Fuel remains the flagship — 16oz cans, 300mg caffeine, zero sugar, with BCAAs and CoQ10. Popular flavors include Melon Mania, Razzle Berry, Orange Dreamsicle, Lemon HDZ, and Peach Fizz. The line targets pre-workout and gym occasions.
Reign Storm, launched in 2022, represents Monster's play for the "better-for-you" energy segment currently dominated by Celsius. At 12oz with 200mg of plant-based caffeine from guayusa, biotin, and no artificial flavors, Storm targets a broader wellness audience — including women and non-gym consumers. In September 2023, Reign Storm became the official energy drink of the Association of Pickleball Players (APP).
Reign Inferno is a thermogenic variant marketed for calorie-burning support, containing 300mg caffeine plus additional metabolism-boosting ingredients. It occupies a niche between pre-workout supplements and traditional energy drinks.
Reign's marketing strategy differs significantly from Bang's influencer-first approach. Instead of flooding Instagram with micro-influencers, Reign has pursued institutional sports partnerships:
This approach trades viral moments for steady brand-building through sports legitimacy. It's a slower burn than influencer marketing but more sustainable and less susceptible to individual creator controversies.
While Reign markets itself as "Total Body Fuel" with BCAAs and CoQ10, the actual functional doses deserve scrutiny:
The fitness/performance energy drink segment is one of the most contested spaces in consumer beverages. Reign competes across multiple fronts:
| Brand | Caffeine | Positioning | Key Advantage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Reign Total Body Fuel | 300mg | Fitness / Pre-workout | Monster/KO distribution network |
| Celsius | 200mg | Healthy / Thermogenic | Cult following, "MetaPlus" branding, Pepsi distribution |
| Bang Energy | 300mg | Fitness / Performance | Nostalgia brand equity (now Monster-owned) |
| C4 Energy | 200mg | Pre-workout crossover | Nutrabolt supplement credibility |
| Ghost Energy | 200mg | Lifestyle / Gaming | Licensed flavors, strong DTC community |
| Alani Nu | 200mg | Women's wellness / Fitness | Female-focused branding, clean aesthetic |
| RYSE Fuel | 200mg | Lifestyle / Licensed flavors | Nostalgia flavors (Ring Pop, Kool-Aid) |
| Monster Energy | 160mg | Mainstream / Action sports | Market leader, 30%+ share (sibling brand) |
| Red Bull | 114mg | Premium / Lifestyle | Category creator, 40%+ global share |
Reign sits in an awkward middle ground. It's too "gym bro" for the clean-energy crowd (Celsius, Alani Nu) and too corporate for the supplement-native audience (Ghost, C4). Its greatest asset — Monster's distribution — is also its greatest liability, as it must compete for shelf space and marketing dollars with Monster's own flagship products.
The acquisition of Bang further complicates matters. Monster now owns three energy drink brands (Monster, Reign, Bang) competing in overlapping segments. Portfolio rationalization seems inevitable — and Reign's position as the middle child makes it vulnerable.
Positive sentiment centers on flavor quality and caffeine potency. Negative sentiment is driven by concerns about artificial sweeteners, skepticism over functional ingredient claims, and some consumers feeling Reign lacks a distinct brand identity compared to more personality-driven competitors like Ghost or Celsius.
Reign Energy is the corporate machine's answer to a grassroots fitness movement. It does everything competently — decent flavors, strong distribution, competitive pricing, adequate caffeine — without doing anything brilliantly. It's the Toyota Camry of fitness energy drinks: reliable, widely available, and utterly unremarkable.
Reign's future depends on Monster's portfolio strategy. With Bang now in-house, Monster must decide how to position three overlapping energy brands. The most likely scenario: Reign Total Body Fuel continues as the hardcore fitness play, Reign Storm competes in the wellness-energy space, and Bang gets quietly deprioritized or repositioned as a value brand.
Reign won't disappear — Monster's distribution muscle ensures shelf presence. But without a more compelling brand identity or genuine product innovation, it risks becoming a permanent second-tier player in a segment where Celsius has seized the cultural momentum and newcomers like Ghost and RYSE are capturing the next generation of consumers.
Last Updated: March 22, 2026