The Editor
Oranel Review is an independent editorial on men's everyday wellness, habits, and considered living. It is published from Vienna and does not carry advertising.
Oranel Review was established in 2022 with a straightforward editorial purpose: to write about men's everyday wellness — morning habits, physical practice, nutrition, grooming, and the material culture of daily life — with the same degree of care and evidence-awareness that the subject deserves but rarely receives in mainstream publishing.
The publication does not carry advertising and does not accept sponsored content. The editorial positions it takes are its own. When a product is mentioned, it is because it merits discussion, not because an arrangement has been reached. When research is cited, it is because it is relevant, not because it is flattering to a preferred conclusion.
Tobias Ashcroft, who has written on lifestyle and nutrition for independent publications since 2019, serves as editor-in-chief. He is joined by a small number of contributing editors and guest writers who are selected for their expertise and their willingness to write with precision rather than enthusiasm.
The publication is based in Vienna, Austria, where the office and editorial work are conducted. The address, telephone number, and email are available on the contact page for readers who wish to correspond or to raise questions about any published content.
The early hour and daily practice
Morning routines, daily practice structures, sleep, journalling, and the architecture of a well-begun day.
Strength, endurance, and outdoor activity
Training methodology, body composition, seasonal fitness planning, and the practice of sustained physical capacity.
Protein-rich meals, meal prep, and hydration
Evidence-informed nutrition for active men — protein-rich eating, meal preparation, and the practical management of dietary habits.
Personal care, wardrobe, and the well-kept
Grooming essentials, skincare basics, seasonal wardrobe planning, and the considered upkeep of everyday appearance.
Stress management and work-life balance
Stress management strategies, recovery practices, and the broader conditions that support sustainable daily performance.
Habits, systems, and the discipline of attention
Productivity habits, time management approaches, and the practical organisation of working days and creative output.
What we believe about how this kind of writing should be done
Evidence before enthusiasm
We do not publish a claim because it is interesting to believe. We publish it when it is supported by evidence sufficient to make it worth a reader's attention. Enthusiasm is not a substitute for accuracy, and a corrected error is always preferable to a defended one.
The ordinary day over the exceptional one
Our editorial concern is with the habits that are maintained across the ordinary working week, not with the heroic exception. The man who trains three times a week for five years will benefit more from that practice than the man who follows an intensive programme for eight weeks and then stops.
No advertising, no arrangements
We do not carry advertising and do not enter into commercial arrangements with product manufacturers or service providers. Our editorial positions are not for sale. We disclose any relationship that could reasonably affect a reader's interpretation of our coverage.
Precision over comprehensiveness
We publish less than we could. A focused article that says one thing clearly is more useful to a reader than a comprehensive survey that says many things imprecisely. We do not mistake length for quality or coverage for value.
For correspondence, submissions, and corrections
We welcome letters, corrections, and thoughtful responses to anything we have published. For pitches, please read our editorial standards before writing.