Our testing notes.
Start with what's on the label. Pherazone Super for Gay Men lists androstenone, androstenol and androstadienone, three compounds the dedicated community genuinely respects. Androstenone brings sexual presence and masculine gravity, and it's dose-sensitive, so you want it calibrated correctly. Androstenol softens the social edges and makes you easier to approach. Androstadienone, the so-called 'love molecule,' adds emotional warmth and has actually been studied in peer-reviewed research for its mood effects. On paper, a defensible trio for a gay men's social-romantic blend.
The skepticism kicks in around the marketing. Pherazone's whole pitch is concentration superiority: '10X pheromones,' 'highest concentration on the market.' The community's position is clear and consistent. Pheromones are biologically active at microgram doses, and the concentrations Pherazone implies (it has historically cited figures like 72-125mg/oz across the line) are either heavily diluted, mislabeled, or fabricated for marketing. High numbers on a label aren't the same as effective dosing. Overdosing androstenone in particular tends to produce negative social effects, intimidation, discomfort, outright aversion, rather than attraction.
The bundle pricing, $519.84 for seven bottles, deserves a direct note. That's a big commitment to a brand with no field-tested reputation in the communities that evaluate these products rigorously. For the same money or less, you could spend months experimenting with products from Liquid Alchemy Labs or PheromoneXS, which have real forum histories and disclosed compound ratios. If you're already a Pherazone customer and enjoy the fragrance, that's a legitimate reason to keep buying. But as an entry point into pheromone wear, this isn't the most evidence-supported path.


