Our testing notes.
PherX for Gay Women is the listing that most clearly exposes the brand's central problem. It names "Pure Human Pheromones" plus phenethylamine and dopamine as if they were active pheromones, but neither one is. These are neurochemicals, not airborne social-signaling molecules, and dabbing them on skin doesn't do what the framing implies.
Around that sit the brand's usual claims, "highest concentration" and "scientifically proven to work," which no pheromone product can support, plus a poor independent reputation (House of Pheromones rates PherX mild and overpriced).
There's little independent case here. If you want a women's attraction product, a disclosed, community-validated brand using real compounds (copulins, estratetraenol, androstenol) is a far better choice.


