Our testing notes.
Pherazone Extreme For Women is the brand's premium tier: $250.25, 20X concentration claims, 125mg of pheromones per fluid ounce. That last figure is worth pausing on. The enthusiast community has spent years testing named compounds, and it's consistent on one point: pheromone molecules are biologically active at microgram doses. A product claiming 125mg per fluid ounce is either measuring something other than active compounds, using figures that don't translate to bioactive concentration, or making claims that don't survive scrutiny. This isn't a minor caveat. It's the main reason Pherazone ranks poorly with informed buyers despite some surface-level appeal.
The compound list, androstenone, androstenol, androstadienone, copulins and oxytocin, has the same structural problem as the Gay Women version. Most of those are legitimately discussed in the community. Androstadienone has actual published research behind it. Copulins have some empirical support for effects on male testosterone response. But oxytocin, included as though it's a functional pheromone ingredient, can't cross the blood-brain barrier via topical or airborne application at any fragrance-level concentration. It reads as marketing rather than formulation science, and it undermines confidence in the rest of the list.
The review situation is the worst part. One review exists, and it reads more like a testimonial for a different product category entirely. No community testing record, no forum history, no field reports from experienced wearers. For $250, you're paying luxury-perfume prices for a product with no credible user data and a compound list carrying at least one scientifically implausible claim. If you genuinely want female-targeted pheromones, copulins, estratetraenol, androstadienone, enthusiast vendors like Liquid Alchemy Labs offer the same compounds with full transparency, real community testing, and much lower prices.


