Yeah, I made a mistake there typing hurriedly. I'll concede the chronology thing. I'm not sure if dead lifting equates to the effectiveness of super squat mass gains. But using that connection I made my previous argument. Then I mistakenly differentiated between mass building and strength training.
Under a proper bulking routine where gaining fat isn't a problem, you'll want the routines I provided. After massive muscle gains weight will fall off easily and you'll look great.
I think you went the other way and at single digit body fat built up your muscle mass which must have come about with significant difficulty.
I've never read about strict mass building routines; the only ones I know are the joint of mass and strength. I'm not sure about those mechanics. But on differentiating those two you lost me. As for my advice, without this useless quibbling it's still withstanding.
With that corrected, I can't see why you would put the exercises I stated down. Maybe I'm mistakenly connecting the squat routine and the deadlift routine. You DO know how effective supersquat are, right? The massive muscle and strength gain involved?
It's a pretty rational conclusion, I'd say, following a similar diet that the deadlift one would be equally contributory in building mass.
also, i can't see how compound exercises could ever be less effective than isolated ones. muscles need to work together, it's just natural for them to grow together.