CAFFEINE
CONTENT
120-160
mg (not listed—that’s just my guess)
EASE
IN ACQUISITION—1
Found at Holiday Station stores—which have locations in
Alaska, Idaho (just two, way the heck up there in northern Idaho), Michigan,
Minnesota, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Washington, Wisconsin, and
Wyoming—really random distribution, if you ask me. If you live in one of those states near a Holiday Station
store, chances are you’ve seen this energy drink already. If not—then you’re probably in the same
boat as me, and will have to ask around to get your hands on some (not that I
think it’s actually worth the effort)
APPEARANCE/PRESENTATION—4
It’s…so…friggin’…CHEESY!
Seriously, even for a store brand this is bad, and I’ve seen some pretty
bad designs in my day. The logo is
ridiculous, the snake graphic laughable (take a look at any Venom Energy
product to see the snake theme done right and you’ll see what I mean), and even
the overall look suffers from a painfully generic appearance. The only points I give are for this
size and shape of bottle, which I am quite fond of (sits nice and easy in the
hand), and the use of black here.
I know that last bit sounds weird—after all, how many drinks employ the
glossy black look? I don’t know
how to explain it, but here, it’s glossy black done right—if it can be used to the effect of softening my angry
feelings towards the Snake Eyes look, then I call its use successful. Maybe it’s the combination of the
glossy black and this nice bottle shape….
TASTE—3
Yech. I don’t know where Holiday Station gets
off calling this “Tropical Berry”—it doesn’t taste tropical and it sure as heck
doesn’t taste like berries. My
guess is that this drink originated when someone in the R&D department
decided to take two random flavored syrups (whose manufacturers obviously took
no care to make it convincing or agreeable) concocted from two amalgamations of
different flavors—my guess is ‘tropical fruit’ and ‘mixed berry’—throw them
together, and combine the names of the syrups to give the drink its own name:
‘tropical fruit’ + ‘mixed berry’ = ‘tropical berry.’ In any case, the result is a flop—it
doesn’t taste like anything recognizable (in contrast to the zero calorie
version of this beverage—wait until I get to that review!), and on to of that is so thick, syrupy and sweet that
it almost makes you sick to your stomach.
For the flavor alone I would avoid it….
KICK
(INTENSITY)—6
…But
on top of its tasting bad, it delivers hardly any energy—just enough make you
feel a little less tired.
Certainly not potent enough to proffer you any sort of increase in
functionality.
KICK
(DURATION)—6
Toting
as much sugar as this does, I would expect a crash once the end rolled around
after two and a half hours, but truthfully, I don’t know—I make it a point not
to drink anything sugary except right before the gym so I can burn the calories
off during my cardio time, and after the fact I notice that I don’t typically
crash. In any event, two and a
half hours of mediocre energy is not nearly enough of a perk to have to slarg
down that sugary, ambiguous semi-liquid.
THE
DRINK OVERALL—5
The
bottom line here, as with its “citrus” counterpart (we’ll address the “citrus”
issue in my review of the sugar-free versions of these beverages), is that this
is an overall bad energy beverage—one that you had best avoid. It doesn’t taste good, and its kick is
weak enough as to greatly limit its utility. Even at Holiday Station stores, there are better energy
drinks. Grab a Monster Rehab or a
Rockstar Zero Carb or something like that. You’re way better off.
WEBSITE:
holidaystationstores.com
KEYWORDS:
Snake Eyes Tropical Berry energy drink review
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