What Pepe Nietnagel has been up to is beyond belief.
"Today I'm going to take on the nerd Aventus Millésime Impérial," he must have thought.
I'll copy everything from him, and if I get just half of it right, that's enough.
Exactly how the Clone Warrior "Cuba" must have approached "Wild Heart."
We won't get a 1 anyway, but hey, well copied is better than poorly done by oneself.
Wild Heart is a really great fragrance, which clearly shows that it didn't come from the "Mr. Teacher, I know everything" type, but still does quite a few things right.
The DNA of the original is undeniable.
However, the significantly cheaper ingredients cannot be ignored.
The wonderfully melon-fresh opening, the still relatively unique scent direction, this lovely feel-good perception - especially in high temperatures... Everything fits.
Only this rascal has already lost interest after the first (school) hour, and you can tell.
From now on, he just causes mischief.
He doesn't directly sprinkle itching powder on the toilet paper and thus into your behind, but at least he manipulates the school bell. And so, after 30-45 minutes, it's all over.
The report card will say something like "Pepe was always eager, but lacked the necessary diligence."
So it's ultimately clear. The promotion is in jeopardy, but somehow this "N(e)vernagel" manages to scrape through in the end.
Thinking about the Abitur is out of the question, but a respectable trade job isn't so bad either.
That pretty much says it all. Wild Heart is a nice fragrance without endurance. Since this applies to 90% of all Cuba fragrances, it's not a dealbreaker and doesn't come as a surprise.
You really have to give this little guy credit for his price (or is it low?).
For 6 euros for 100 ml. Hey, what more can you complain about?
Into the backpack with the giant bottle and always spritz after sports, during work for a refresh, or in high temperatures for a freshness kick.
Better by far than all that Mexx nonsense from Rossi.