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I had actually been wondering if they had been discontinued myself, but I just found them in a convenience store here in western North Carolina for the first time in years. These were new bars (expiration date sometime in 2014), not older stock. --Khajidha (talk) 13:05, 6 April 2013 (UTC)[reply]
I just finished eating one here in Thailand. I haven't seen them in the U.S. for a while, but in Singapore I used to buy an identical product called Nut Bar (boring name, right?) Nowadays I never see Nut Bars, but occasionally find a NutRageous.49.228.245.135 (talk) 06:39, 28 April 2022 (UTC)[reply]
There's a discussion of the company's branding process that generated one of the bar's names in Developing New Food Products for a Changing Marketplace, a scholarly work on industry practices edited by Aaron L. Brody, John B. Lord. Also, the narrator in Christopher Meeks' The Middle-Aged Man and the Sea takes it for granted that the NutRageous bar is notorious enough that its implications don't need further explanation to his following of readers. While I agree that not every commercial product deserves its own article, in this case it makes enough sense. After all, the product has been profitably consumed around the world, especially in Southeast Asia, for almost three decades, and there are similar products like Snickers, etc. with enough of a consumer base to merit an article.