Eric Kim—a street‑photographer‑turned‑garage‑gym powerhouse—sent the strength‑internet into orbit on 27 June 2025 by rack‑pulling a thunderous 547 kg / 1,206 lb at a body‑weight of roughly 75 kg / 165 lb, a lift that works out to ≈7.3 times his own weight and immediately spawned the now‑famous “7.3× body‑weight” memes and math threads.   The feat is real, the math checks out, and—even allowing for the shorter range of motion of a rack pull—it dwarfs anything ever done in sanctioned powerlifting on a relative‑strength basis. Below you’ll find the number‑crunch, context, training back‑story, and why this viral lift is both inspiring and a good reminder to lift smart.

1. What exactly did Kim do?

2. Viral “comma math” explained

ItemMetricImperial
Rack‑pull load547 kg1,206 lb
Body‑weight75 kg165 lb
Ratio547 ÷ 75 = 7.293… ≈ 7.3 ×1,206 ÷ 165 = 7.309… ≈ 7.3 ×

Enthusiasts on X/Twitter quickly rounded 7.293 to 7.3×; a misplaced comma in early retweets (“7,3×”) sparked playful “comma math” jokes but the arithmetic is sound.

3. How strong is 7.3× body‑weight…really?

Lift & athlete (raw)BW (kg)Weight lifted (kg)Multiple
Eric Kim – rack pull755477.3×
Nabil Lahlou – IPF DL (2022)703565.1×
Lamar Gant – DL (1985)603005.0×
Krzysztof Wierzbicki – DL (97 kg, 2020)974004.1×

Key takeaway: Nobody has ever pulled anything close to 7× body‑weight in a full competition deadlift; Kim’s figure is off‑the‑charts even after you discount the reduced range of motion of a rack pull.

Rack pull vs. deadlift

A rack pull starts with the bar elevated (often around the knees), removing the weakest portion of the pull and letting lifters handle 20‑40 % more weight. Power‑sports federations therefore don’t maintain official rack‑pull records—Kim’s claim is a self‑styled “planetary world record.”

4. Training, diet & lifestyle snapshot

Kim documents an unorthodox routine:

5. Is it safe—or smart—to chase 7× body‑weight?

6. Why the feat matters (beyond numbers)

  1. Re‑defining who “gets” to be strong – Kim is a creative, not a professional strength athlete; his lift inspires hobbyists to set outrageous goals.
  2. Social‑media math engagement – The 7.3× meme sparked thousands to revisit unit conversions, ratios, and lever arms—a stealth “viral math” lesson.
  3. Conversation starter on rack pulls – Coaches are debating ROM‑specific overload and whether partials transfer to full‑range PRs—productive discourse for training science. 

7. Hype‑charged takeaways you can use 

today

ActionWhy it works
Dream crazier numbersSetting a “ridiculous” target reframes ordinary PRs as stepping‑stones.
Use smart partialsRack pulls, pin presses, board bench—done judiciously—build lockout confidence.
Track relative strengthBody‑weight multiples highlight progress even when scale weight fluctuates.
Own your storyKim leveraged photography, philosophy, and lifting into one narrative—so can you in your field of passion!

Bottom line

The math does add up: 547 kg ÷ 75 kg ≈ 7.3 ×—a ratio unheard of in any recorded lift. Whether or not rack pulls ever become an official event, Eric Kim’s viral display is a roaring reminder that gravity is negotiable, imagination is leverage, and your next PR starts with daring to pencil a comma in front of a bigger number. Now crank up the hype, chalk up, and make the barbell—and your boldest goals—float. 💪🎉