Pacific Pulse PURE. Parfums
3
Helpful Review
More Show than Substance...
With Pacific Pulse, I am now evaluating the third and final fragrance in the current offering of the masculine faction.
After Noble Night presented a mediocre candidate, Ombré Oud turned out to be an underwhelming scent.
Pacific Pulse also fails to make a significant leap, as it likely aims to be something it cannot truly be.
Anyone with "Pacific" in the name and a blue appearance is instinctively often thought to be a fresh and aquatic scent.
It is therefore not really surprising that it is categorized as "aquatic," although I believe this is completely off the mark.
Looking at the fragrance pyramid makes this clearer.
The closest thing that could provide an aquatic feel might be a mineral amber, but that can be completely disregarded here.
Let’s be clear, Pacific Pulse is not remotely an aquatic.
Rather, it is a fruity-sweet little water.
And it does so in a rather simple, straightforward manner without any real development, depth, or twist.
In the broadest sense, to give a sense of direction, one could say it leans towards the "Erba Pura | XerJoff" DNA, "Kirkè (Extrait de Parfum) | Tiziana Terenzi," or even "Chatoyant | Iruela."
But please, this is not a comparison! It serves solely for orientation.
Those who enjoy such sweet, fruity combinations might want to give this a try. Personally, I don’t find it terrible, just simple and lacking anything special.
Everything feels rather artificial, synthetic, and not particularly high-quality.
The longevity is about 6 hours, and the sillage is rather moderate.
In a final overall conclusion, the brand did not really convince me.
After Noble Night presented a mediocre candidate, Ombré Oud turned out to be an underwhelming scent.
Pacific Pulse also fails to make a significant leap, as it likely aims to be something it cannot truly be.
Anyone with "Pacific" in the name and a blue appearance is instinctively often thought to be a fresh and aquatic scent.
It is therefore not really surprising that it is categorized as "aquatic," although I believe this is completely off the mark.
Looking at the fragrance pyramid makes this clearer.
The closest thing that could provide an aquatic feel might be a mineral amber, but that can be completely disregarded here.
Let’s be clear, Pacific Pulse is not remotely an aquatic.
Rather, it is a fruity-sweet little water.
And it does so in a rather simple, straightforward manner without any real development, depth, or twist.
In the broadest sense, to give a sense of direction, one could say it leans towards the "Erba Pura | XerJoff" DNA, "Kirkè (Extrait de Parfum) | Tiziana Terenzi," or even "Chatoyant | Iruela."
But please, this is not a comparison! It serves solely for orientation.
Those who enjoy such sweet, fruity combinations might want to give this a try. Personally, I don’t find it terrible, just simple and lacking anything special.
Everything feels rather artificial, synthetic, and not particularly high-quality.
The longevity is about 6 hours, and the sillage is rather moderate.
In a final overall conclusion, the brand did not really convince me.
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2 Comments
Floyd 1 year ago
1
From what I read between the lines, a 6 is still quite generous for him, -)
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Intenso 1 year ago
You're not entirely wrong there. When I think it over and compare, it's too good. I’ll lower my rating by 0.5 points. But hey, no victory anthem now, okay? I'm usually not easily influenced 😄
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