A woman from Alabama recently bought an energy drink from a gas station and noticed something strange about it. TikTok user @ebony.yaps shared a video showing the Alani Nu Witch’s Brew can she purchased, and it looked different from the ones she normally buys. When she got home and compared the new can with one she already had, she saw right away that something was off. The cans looked similar at first, but a closer look showed some big differences that most people would probably miss. “Am I gonna die if I drink this?” she said in her TikTok video, clearly worried about the can. The top of the can had a “Supplemented!” sticker from Health Canada, which was the first thing that caught her eye. She also noticed this can only had 140 milligrams of caffeine, but her usual can from the U.S. has 200 milligrams. Even the nutrition label looked different, with a plain white background instead of the purple one she was used to seeing. What she really bought from the gas station The woman did not buy a fake or dangerous product. What happened was she ended up with a Canadian version of the drink that somehow got sold at a gas station in Alabama. Canada has tougher rules about energy drinks than the United States, which is why the can looked and felt different. @ebony.yaps guys idk what’s wrong w this one #fyp #viral #trending #alani ♬ original sound – ebony.yaps Canadian law treats energy drinks as a special type of food that needs extra labels. The country does not allow energy drinks to have more than 180 milligrams of caffeine in one container. That is why the Canadian can had less caffeine than the American one. The “Supplemented!” sticker is also something Canada requires on all energy drinks so people know what they are buying. The U.S. has its own set of rules that are handled by the Food and Drug Administration. American energy drinks can have a lot more caffeine without needing special warning labels like the ones in Canada. This is why the regular Alani Nu Witch’s Brew sold in American stores comes with 200 milligrams of caffeine. @alaninutrition Some summers change you. Ours just made us more obsessed with this flav #witchsbrew #summer #obsessed ♬ Suave – The Pianist & D’Michel leb Even though the woman was nervous about drinking it, the Canadian version is totally safe. It actually has less caffeine than what she normally drinks, so it would give her less of a buzz. The real problem is just that products meant for one country sometimes show up in stores in another country, which can confuse shoppers who are not expecting it. This whole thing shows why it is important to read labels carefully, especially when buying drinks with caffeine. The same product can be very different depending on which country it was made for because each place has its own rules. Other people have also shared surprising discoveries about things they did not expect to find.