Our testing notes.
Pherazone Super for Women is the brand's most elaborately positioned product, and its compound list looks comprehensive at first glance: androstenone, androstenol, androstadienone, androstenol again (listed separately, suggesting alpha and beta variants), copulins and oxytocin. Some belong in a serious women's formula. Androstadienone is one of the most discussed emotional compounds in the community, tied to warmth and a deepening sense of connection. Copulins are the most primal female chemistry compound in common use, with some research support for effects on male receptiveness. Androstenol rounds things out with social approachability. In the right dosing, this could be a real formula.
Then there's oxytocin. The community and the scientific literature agree: oxytocin can't cross the blood-brain barrier via topical or airborne application at consumer-product concentrations. Applied to skin, it can't produce the bonding or trust effects that intranasal oxytocin shows in clinical studies. Its inclusion isn't a bonus feature. It's a credibility problem. When a brand lists an ingredient that the community and basic physiology both say can't work in this format, it raises serious questions about whether the rest of the formula was designed with rigor or with the same marketing logic.
At $519.84 for seven bottles, Pherazone Super is the most expensive product in the lineup, and the price is pitched as a reflection of that expanded compound list. But price and quality don't map cleanly in this category, especially when no concentration data is given for any of the six compounds and no community testing exists to benchmark results. Liquid Alchemy Labs builds its women's formulas with named compounds, disclosed concentrations and years of forum field reports. That's what $70-90 per bottle looks like when you know what you're paying for. Pherazone Super, at similar per-bottle math, offers dramatically less accountability for the price.


