
Nature's Logic Canine Chicken Meal Feast
Owners who want completely synthetic-free nutrition with whole-food-only vitamins and minerals

Purina Pro Plan Shredded Blend Chicken & Rice
Owners who trust veterinary-backed nutrition and want excellent palatability
Score Comparison
Pricing & Features
Making Your Decision
When to Choose Nature's Logic Canine Chicken Meal Feast
Owners who want completely synthetic-free nutrition with whole-food-only vitamins and minerals
Nature's Logic is unique in the industry — zero synthetic vitamins or minerals, all nutrition from whole food sources. No rice, potatoes, or common starches either. This philosophy-driven approach appeals to owners who believe synthetic supplements are inferior to food-based nutrition. A niche choice for the most ingredient-conscious buyers.
Strengths
- Zero synthetic vitamins or minerals — all nutrition derived from whole food sources
- No corn, wheat, soy, rice, or potatoes — unique carb-light formulation
- Clean safety record with no recalls in brand history
Limitations
- Premium pricing at ~$1.92/day for a chicken meal-based formula
- Chicken meal (not fresh chicken) is the primary protein despite premium positioning
- Smaller brand with limited retail availability outside specialty pet stores
When to Choose Purina Pro Plan Shredded Blend Chicken & Rice
Owners who trust veterinary-backed nutrition and want excellent palatability
Purina Pro Plan is the most veterinarian-recommended brand in this comparison, backed by decades of feeding trial data. The shredded blend texture is genuinely unique and dogs tend to love it. The trade-off is corn gluten meal and by-product meal in the formula — ingredients that premium brands avoid.
Strengths
- Backed by extensive feeding trials and veterinary research at Purina labs
- Unique shredded blend texture combines hard kibble with tender meaty pieces
- Live probiotics added for digestive health — one of few brands offering this
Limitations
- Contains corn gluten meal and poultry by-product meal in the ingredient list
- Dec 2022/Feb 2023 recalls of veterinary diet lines raise brand-level concerns
- Ingredient transparency is limited — vague sourcing information

