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A
while back, I was reading a review on edjunkie.com and read the review for this
drink. Two formulations were
mentioned—an old, and a new. Well,
by the time I got ahold of a can, it was for sure the new formulation—you know,
with the ‘Extra Strength Nitrous Technology’ logo rather than the traditional
deranged “NITROUS” logo. Moved on
with my life after the fact, but recently, while visiting a Mexican store, I
came across a batch of the old can of Killer B—which had obviously been there a
long time. Grabbed a can, blew the
sizable amount of dust off, bought it, and thereafter drank it. I’m here today to note that there is
indeed a difference, and to review both.
I’m going to go out of order today, just because the newer version is
the one I tried first, and the comparison will make more sense if I go that
route.
CAFFEINE
CONTENT
EASE
IN ACQUISITION—9
I
used to see this stuff everywhere; now I’m starting to notice that a few places
have stopped carrying it. Still,
it’s not hard to find, and you can get it just short of everywhere.
APPEARANCE/PRESENTATION—8
Same
unleashed-beast appearance of the other two, with the slanted Monster M, except with a moderately more regular
background—yellow honeycomb in this case.
The contrast between the chaotic appearance of the other two Monster
Nitrous flavors and this one is something I found intriguing; I’m surprised I
haven’t seen more people buying it sooner.
NEW
FORMULATION
TASTE—8
I
expected the characteristic release of pressure from this drink as I
experienced from the others of the Monster Nitrous line, but I still wasn’t
quite prepared for what I got—a tremendous WHOOSH
and a spray of fine mist that reached the nearby wall and ceiling. Checking to make sure that I still had
all my fingers, I took a swig, and experienced a flavor of a curious citrus
persuasion, predominantly lemon.
There was a mild sweetness akin to the sweetness of honey in there without
the flavor thereof (I’m guessing that this is where the “Killer B” came from),
but it was definitely less sweet than the others. One way in which it was similar to the others is the unique
carbonation and very smooth flavor, which made this pretty easy to take down.
KICK
(INTENSITY)—6
I
was noticeably fatigued before drinking this, and was brought to the point of
being reasonably awake after the fact, without any jitters. Effective, if a bit standard.
KICK
(DURATION)—7
Duration
was average, with no crash after the fact. Nothing more to report other than that.
THE
DRINK OVERALL—7
The
best way to sum up this drink is a pleasant taste experience with a standard
energy experience. I don’t
recommend it for a serious wake-me-up, though it should do for anything
less. My approval of it isn't the
most enthusiastic I've offered, but still, I can't say there's anything to be
lost in trying it.
OLD
FORMULATION
TASTE—9
As
I mentioned, there is a difference between what you can find now and what was once
available. There’s a similar
flavor profile to the new, except for two things: 1) the lemon flavor is more
convincing and less generic, and 2) you can actually taste honey in there. It’s thicker, and with a smoother
sweetness than the newer version. Nothing life changing, but enough that I liked it more.
KICK
(INTENSITY)—7
Same
as the new. Decent, if a bit
average.
KICK
(DURATION)—7
Average—2½
hour’s worth of energy without a crash.
THE
DRINK OVERALL—7.67
So…even
if it I won’t lie in bed weeping at night because they changed the flavor (I’ll
save that for the fact that Heavy Metal was discontinued), I’m a bit baffled by
Monster’s decision to do so. If
you can find it, get the old version while before it’s gone for good.
UPDATE: As of September 2012, Killer B has been discontinued.
UPDATE: As of September 2012, Killer B has been discontinued.
KEYWORDS: Monster Nitrous Killer B Energy Drink review, nitrous oxide, extra strength nitrous technology, two flavors, new version, old version
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