CAFFEINE
CONTENT
50
mg (according to my sources)
EASE
IN ACQUISITION—5
Much
less common than they used to be.
Nowadays, Neuro products seem to be a dying breed, finding their niche
in the discount sections of grocery stores and at outlets such as Big Lots at
greatly reduced prices.
APPEARANCE/PRESENTATION—9
Functionally,
this could use some work. My
biggest tiff is the fact that you have to really read this to discover that
it’s meant to be an energy product; it’s only through little bits that say
things like “energize the healthy way” and “Not recommended for children under
12 years or people sensitive to caffeine.
If you are pregnant or nursing contact your physician prior to use.”
that you get that idea that Neuro wants you to get. For that, I have to dock a
point—what’s the point of making an energy beverage if you’re not going to
advertise it as such? Now,
focusing on the aesthetics—this is a beautiful bottle. I don’t know why the lighter red does
so much more for me than the NeuroPassion bottle, but it does; this combined
with the sleek and almost futuristic look make this a winner in my book. Even now I can’t help but pause from
reviewing it every so often just so I can take it in.
TASTE—8
No
idea what to expect here—all I could think as I was pouring out the pale,
pink-orange beverage into my glass of ice was “well, can’t be much worse than
NeuroPassion.*” The first sips
aren’t promising—very watered down.
However, the more you drink it, the more depth it takes on, and soon
you’re enjoying a moderately refreshing beverage with the flavor of mildly
carbonated grapefruit—minus the exceptional tartness characterizing the actual
fruit. I won’t vouch for it’s
potency (see the next two sections), but for the flavor alone I’d say it’s
worth a try.
KICK
(INTENSITY)—4
This
one reminds me of a decent-sized Diet Coke in terms of kick—enough to add a bit
of spring to your step, but short of what most caffeine junkies (like myself)
look for. I might try drinking two
or three in succession one of these days, just to see what happens; but until
that time I’ll be seeking my boost elsewhere.
KICK
(DURATION)—4
Ballpark
of an hour, no crash (not surprising).
THE
DRINK OVERALL—6
In
short, I like the flavor quite a bit, but am not so wild about the kick. When it comes right down to it, this is
a very confused product—it’s an energy drink that really doesn’t claim to be an
energy drink and doesn’t deliver much in the kick department. If you’re one of those people that gets
out-of-your-mind wired after a Mountain Dew I think this will suffice;
otherwise you might have to go the serial drinking route to get a real boost
out of this.
*—You
might remember that as far as flavor is concerned, I awarded NeuroPassion a
6/10 at the time I reviewed it.
The reason behind my apparent heightened dislike is the fact that
NeuroPassion is one of those drinks that you like less the more you think about
it—kind of like a movie that you see, enjoy at the time, and then go on to pick
it apart for days after the fact until you’re filled with nothing but loathing
towards it (think “Avatar”). I
indicated that NeuroPassion was nothing worth spending money on at the time,
and reiterate that point with added conviction now.
WEBSITE:
drinkneuro.com
KEYWORDS:
NeuroSonic energy drink review, low carb, low calorie, low sugar
I was wondering why I don't see brand anymore. Seems like this brand is on it's to the graveyard if it's dying. It's already gone from the stores I went to where I live.
ReplyDeleteI heard what they are doing with this flavor. Link: myneurosonic.com/
ReplyDelete