Our testing notes.
Let's be direct. This is a set of five designer-inspired fragrances sold by a pheromone brand. No listed pheromone compounds, no named molecules, no formulation data beyond 'European fragrance experts' and the promise of luxury without the price. Land on this page expecting pheromone content and you'll be disappointed, and a little confused about why it's in a pheromone catalog at all. The charitable read is that Pherazone means these as cover scents to pair with their concentrates. The less charitable read is that the brand trades on pheromone-adjacent positioning to sell ordinary fragrance.
As a fragrance sampler, the picture is more mixed but not without merit. The three reviewers who've weighed in average around 4.3 stars, which is decent, but the complaints are telling. Floyd S. wanted bigger bottles. Sky W. got one that wouldn't spray at all. For a five-piece bundle, a 20% defect rate on something as basic as the spray mechanism is a problem. That said, the scents themselves drew real enthusiasm. Windsor and London got singled out as favorites worth revisiting, and Luis M. sounded satisfied enough to signal a repeat purchase. The fragrances, apparently, do their job.
Five bottles a bit small, but still nice samples!
The honest context is simple. Pherazone has a complicated reputation in the pheromone community, largely around concentration claims elsewhere in the lineup. This bundle sidesteps all that, because it makes no pheromone claims at all. What it offers is a low-stakes way to try several designer-inspired scents before committing to anything bigger. If you're a Pherazone user who wants a matched cover scent, or you're just curious about budget designer alternatives, the bundle has functional value. Just don't buy it expecting anything other than fragrance.


