CAFFEINE
CONTENT
Not
listed
EASE
IN ACQUISITION—7
This,
like the Red Rain energy shot I just reviewed, is a K-Mart acquisition. K-Mart being the (wholly undeservedly)
nigh-omnipresent chain that it is, you should have no difficulty finding
this—unless supply varies from chain to chain. I don’t make it a habit to explore K-Marts outside of my
own, so I have no idea if that’s the case or not.
APPEARANCE/PRESENTATION—5
The
main aesthetic appeal of this shot is that it looks different—and by different,
I mean it’s not an obvious 5 Hour clone.
The tall bottle and rich colors are a nice change from the norm; my only
complaints are 1) the failure of the company to disclose the caffeine contents
of the shots, 2) the incredibly ridiculous name/cheesy misspelling of that
name, and 3) the shrink-wrapping job on my bottle—it doubles over in front,
distorting the logo. Kind of tacky
when a company is that careless about the bottling of their product, isn’t it?
TASTE—0
I
was pleasantly surprised to see in my last trip to K-Mart that this product had
been marked down—from $5.99 to a mere $2.95 for a pack of three. I saw it as an opportunity to get my
hands on some inexpensive energy that I hadn’t even gotten around to
reviewing—as it turns out, however, I should have taken it as a warning.
Hi
Ener-G is one of the nauseating things I have ever had the displeasure of
gagging down. Ever been to an
elderly couple’s house, where the carpet and furniture have been around since
the early 1960’s an haven’t been deep-cleaned in at least two decades, and
everything is rank with the musk of half a century of accumulation of dead skin
cells and B.O.? Well, now you have
the once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to taste that—I say once, even though it’s
sold in the 3-pack, because I can almost certainly guarantee you will never,
ever in a million years want to do it again.
As
far as which elements of the flavor are actually to blame, I’m going to point
the finger at the tea flavoring (which is positively rancid) and the energy
blend (which is excruciatingly bitter)—particularly the ginseng, which is not masked by the tea flavor as the
product description on the website indicates it should be and leaves a hot,
acrid sensation lingering in your mouth after you swallow that is as unpleasant
as anything else out there.
Whatever
the problematic agents, this stuff is foul almost beyond belief, and reason
enough to avoid the product permanently.
KICK
(INTENSITY)—7.5
All
of the above is a pity, because the kick here is one of a superb energy shot. When you’re in the throes of its
effects, you really feel as though you’ve taken an energizing vitamin
supplement rather than your run-of-the-mill energy shot, if that makes any
sense. If not—let’s just say that
while the strength is only slightly above average, it is characterized by a
general lack of harshness or heaviness that characterizes a number of other
energy products, and feels good enough that I would return to the product
again, were it not for the atrocious flavor.
KICK
(DURATION)—7.5
Somewhere
between three, three and a half hours.
No appreciable crash.
THE
DRINK OVERALL—5
Make
no mistake—this is a product that kicks well enough that I’m sure the company
meant well when they formulated it.
Problem is I cannot in good conscious recommend it—it tastes like some
sort of poison or emetic, and no excellence in quality or quantity of kick ever
begin to make up for that.
WEBSITE:
windmillvitamins.com
KEYWORDS:
Hi Ener-G energy shot review
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