
Long story short on this Cupid Hypnosis cologne review: no, it doesnโt work. Iโd been flabbergasted by the hype it was pulling on TikTok, so I bought a bottle and tested it myself for three weeks.
Iโll be straight with you โ yes, I bought Cupid Fragrancesโ Hypnosis 2.0โฆ knowing full well it was probably going to be a dud. Iโve reviewed loads of pheromone products over the years, and hereโs what Iโve discovered:
You can sell almost anything if you paid an influencer enough.
So is Cupid Hypnosis cologne real or fake? Based on my observations: the product itself is real, but what it claims to do is fake.
The company behind it appears to have significant resources, able to purchase influencer reviews on social media, as well as astroturf their public perception in search results (more on the manipulated TrustPilot reviews shortly).
The vast majority of Cupid Hypnosis cologne reviews are completely fabricated. Itโs more like a scammy marketing company, rather than a serious pheromone cologne or fragrance business.
Itโs another usual suspect in a long line of pheromone scams.
Cupid Hypnosis cologne: a marketing operation, not a fragrance brand
Products like โCupid Hypnosis 2.0โ are exactly why mainstream skeptics often dismiss pheromones immediately.
Before you continue
The company behind Cupid Hypnosis cologne appears to have upgraded their website and packaging. The current version is Cupid Hypnosis 3.0 by Cupids Fragrance. However, this is more than likely the same product in new skin. They still used scummy marketing tactics, manipulated reviews, and likely are not even using pheromones in the product. This is not a trustworthy company to deal with either way, as youโll soon discover. Some of the previous observations in this original review may have changed, like those pertaining to borderline fraudulent checkout processes.
Somehow these products keep popping up across TikTok and Instagram. Thatโs not an accident: when I said you can sell anything with a big enough influencer behind it, I meant it literally.
Why, you ask?
Because Cupidโs is not really a serious fragrance or pheromone company. It is a marketing company, with โCupid Hypnosisโ as probably one of many offeringsโฆ I call it โdropshittingโ.
How the Cupid Hypnosis cologne business actually works
This usually involves paying social media influencers to โreviewโ products positively, and or create fake viral shorts, or other related content to promote products. The bigger the influencer, the bigger the impact.
This can all easily make a company or product appear much more influential/larger/successful than it really is. Their own website states over 500,000 buyers. Iโve been in this space for over 10 years, and I highly doubt that.
Surprise surprise โ you can lie on the internet.
If youโve been around this site for any length of time, youโll know Iโve burned through 10+ years of pheromone colognesโฆ the good, the bad, and the occasional outright scam.
Cupid Hypnosis 2.0 is a scam.
Once you start looking at how Cupid operates โ the checkout funnel, manipulated reviews, unredeemable returns policy, it becomes pretty clear this is nothing but a pure cash-grabโฆ
โฆ a cash grab with pheromones tacked on as a gimmick, nothing more.
During my testing, I wasnโt able to discern much of anything with it โ other than being paranoid I smelled like some kind of weird chemicals.
Cupid Hypnosis cologne review summary:
- Initially, I was not able to smell any pheromones in the product itself. Normally, if there is a good dose of any of the common pheromones like androstenone, androstenol, and androstadienone, there is a distinct smell to them. Unfortunately, this is just cheap drug store cologne with no apparent pheromones.
- Results confirmed it: It likely contains little to no pheromones, and doesnโt appear to produce any results in various contexts. When tested against baseline targets, people I know are responsive to pheromones, there is no change.
- Same results on strangers, in most situations: absolutely nothing to note. No IOIโs, flirting, social effects, or discernable results over 2-3 weeks. Even average pheromone products like Raw Chemistry can produce minor effects, but nothing happened with Cupids.
- The Cupid Hypnosis cologne bottle artwork is awful. An AI could have spun up something more elegant in 10 seconds. For a $50 product, itโs very low effort. (The newer 3.0 bow-and-arrow bottle does look genuinely cool – a shame itโs wrapped around a bad product.)
- Generic scent profile. The โaromatic fougรจreโ the marketing promises is doing a lot of work. What actually shows up on skin is cheap smelling generic drug store scent. Itโs not โunpleasantโ, just average.
- Three to four hours of longevity, weak projection. For a fragrance at this price – the 2.0 ran $40-$60, the 3.0 is around $75 – thatโs poor. However, you may be doing people around you a favor with this weak longevity and projection.
- Their apparent โPheroPureVXNโ is made up marketing nonsense. And no, itโs not actually a registered trademark. This is made to make it sound like some kind of special proprietary formula. Itโs not.
- The checkout flow is extremely scammy. Pre-checked upsells, bundle pressure, fake scarcity timers. Attempts to bundle in extra products at checkout by hiding the real cost as a bonusโฆ itโs disgusting.
- The 30-day money-back guarantee is worthless. It’s structured in a way that makes it functionally impossible to actually use. Long story short: Using the product “voids” the money back guarantee promise, which is completely contradictory. If you don’t test it, how will you know if its actually good or not?
- Returns ship to China. Which means the product almost certainly ships from China too โ something weโll come back to. (The current 3.0 may now route returns through a US warehouse in Nevada, but the bottle itself is still near-certainly made in China.)
- TrustPilot review distribution shows the unmistakable fingerprints of paid astroturfing alongside genuinely angry customers. Perhaps the most egregious and scummiest marketing campaigns Iโve ever seen. More on this shortly.
- Quick note on spelling: people search this product as Cupid Hypnosis, Cupids Hypnosis, Cupidโs Hypnosis, Cupid 2.0, Cupid Hypnosis 3.0, Cupid Cologne, Cupids Cologne, Cupid Perfume, Hypnosis Perfume, Cupid Pheromone Cologne, and probably a dozen other variations. Same product. Same answer.
Cupid Hypnosis Pheromone Cologne Review
Pheromone Effect
Fragrance & Quality
Longevity & Projection
Value For Money
Brand Trust & Credibility
Returns Policy
Cupid Hypnosis is ineffective.
In my testing, Cupid Hypnosis did not produce attraction effects, social effects, stronger reactions from women, or anything I could separate from normal fragrance placebo. Unfortunately, Cupid Hypnosis 2.0, or "Hypnosis 3.0" are all going to be the same cheap, nasty scammy pheromone colognes. Save your money and avoid buying Cupid Hypnosis cologne. Instead, use trusted vendors recommended by House Of Pheromones. Also, be wary of fake Cupid Cologne reviews on Trustpilot, and paid influencer marketing on TikTok or other social media.
Does Cupid Hypnosis actually work?
Short answer: no, Cupid Hypnosis does not work. Across three weeks and nine field sessions, in normal real-world conditions, Cupid Hypnosis 2.0 did nothing I could measure.
Testing method: I wore it in normal social settings, including coffee shops, bars, gyms, errands, and repeated interactions with people whose baseline behavior I already know. I tested normal application and one deliberate over-application session. I watched for changes in conversation initiation, eye contact, proximity, warmth, flirtation, and reactions from women compared with my usual baseline.
The “tells” I watch for:
- Conversations starting that usually don’t (a cashier chatting, a barista leaning in, a stranger asking the time)
- Eye contact holding a beat longer than baseline
- Personal space softening, people standing and staying closer
- The involuntary flushed reaction women sometimes give without realising it, one of the more reliable tells with mid-tier romantic formulas
- A general warming-up of the social energy around you
My baseline is well established. Same cashiers, same baristas, same gym regulars who’ve given me the same neutral nod for years. A real shift would show up against that. Here’s what nine sessions of Hypnosis 2.0 produced:
- Sessions 1 to 5, normal application: nothing. Same conversations, same body language, same everything.
- Session 6: started wondering if I was simply under-dosing.
- Session 7, deliberate pherobomb (eight sprays across pulse points): the only reaction was my own, the smell was strong enough that I felt self-conscious.
- Sessions 8 to 9, back to normal: still nothing.
NOTHING. Not a flicker. A real pherobomb of a working formula does something, people pulling back from too much androstenone, or loosening up and lingering with a good social blend. This did neither.
Which lines up exactly with what’s in it. Or rather, what isn’t.
The Hypnosis 2.0 formula: what’s listed, and what’s missing

To Cupid’s slight credit, it at least names the three pheromones it claims to use. Most scam-tier brands just print “proprietary blend” and hope you don’t ask. Cupid lists:
- Androstenone – the alpha/dominance molecule. Used right, it adds presence. Pushed too hard, it tips into intimidation.
- Androstadienone – the most-studied human pheromone. Mood lift, light bonding, often called the “warmth” molecule.
- Androstenol – the social, friendly one. In real formulas it works as a buffer, softening androstenone’s edge and keeping the wearer approachable.
That means Cupid is naming real pheromone compounds, but naming compounds is not the same as proving an effective finished formula. The missing pieces are dose, ratio, carrier system, testing history, and repeatable field performance.
These common pheromones have been used in every low-tier pheromone product for over a decade. Pure Instinct uses it. Pherazone uses it. A dozen drop-shipped brands you’ve never heard of have been flogging it since the early 2010s. It’s the pheromone equivalent of a fragrance house bragging about a top note of citrus.
Anyone who’s actually formulated or seriously tested this stuff will tell you the real story is in what’s missing:
- Concentrations: undisclosed. We’ve no idea how much of anything is in the bottle, a meaningful dose or a homeopathic sprinkle. And going by my field test, the smart money is on little to none, or a token amount of low-grade material. That’s the whole difference between a working product and a placebo.
- Ratios: undisclosed. In real formulation the ratio is most of the magic. Get the androstenone-to-androstenol balance wrong by a factor of two and you’ve made a completely different product. Cupid says nothing.
- Carrier system: pheromones are unstable. They need the right carrier, gels, oils, alcohol bases tuned to preserve and release them. No word on what Cupid uses, which usually means whatever the perfumer had on the shelf.
- Layering: a serious formula runs somewhere between five and fifteen molecules, layered for specific outcomes. Cupid uses three. Entry-level ones.
Then there’s “PheroPureVXN” – On paper, it sounds impressive. In practice, its meaningless.
โPheroPureVXNโ isnโt a registered trademark on the USPTO database. Itโs a made-up piece of marketing bollocks. And even if it were real, all that means is no other brand can use the name. Cupid has never published a methodology, a study, or a single concrete detail about what it is.
Most serious formulators won’t hand you the full recipe – that’s how they protect their work from copycats. But the good ones have earned their reputation, and spent significant time “tuning” their formulas to create powerful, specific effects. That’s exactly why trust matters so much in this space: you’re betting on the maker’s track record, not a spec sheet.
Real pheromones produce noticeable effects, and a real dose carries a distinct smell of its own. Cupid offers none of that. Just three molecule names, a trademarked acronym (maybe), and an Instagram budget. If you came here for a serious Cupid pheromone cologne review hoping the formula does something specific, look elsewhere.
What does Cupid Hypnosis actually smell like?
The claim: an aromatic fougรจre with vanilla, amber, musk, and spice. Sophisticated. Mysterious. Lingers long after you’ve left the room. What it actually smells like: a synthetic sweet musk you’ve smelled in every drugstore body-spray aisle since 2014.
Here’s how it actually develops:
- First 10 minutes: a burst of synthetic sweetness. Vanilla and musk lead, pitched at the sugary, cheap end. Closer to mall body spray than a perfumer’s vanilla.
- 30 minutes to 2 hours: the amber and spice the marketing promised barely show up. It just smells cheap and generic, not like any true “fougรจre”.
- 2 to 4 hours: generic woody-musk base, indistinguishable from a hundred other dollar store knock offs. By hour four you’re down to faint residue.
- Projection: weak. People within arm’s reach might catch it for the first half hour. After that it barely clears your own collar.
- Longevity: three to four hours, tops.
Thatโs the honest cupid hypnosis notes breakdown, and its not even close to what is promised.
The community reviews echo it. My favourite, from a one-star on TrustPilot:
“I bought it expecting a warm fragrance and instead got the smell of commercial-grade cleaner mixed with Thai food. Definitely won’t be buying again.”
Cupid Hypnosis 2.0 vs 3.0: what changed, and what didn’t
The version I tested is 2.0. The bottle on sale now is 3.0 – the one in the bow-and-arrow packaging, listed around $75. So before you assume the new one fixed anything, here’s the honest comparison.
What changed:

- Packaging: genuinely nicer. The bow-and-arrow bottle looks the part. Credit where it’s due, it’s the best thing about the product.
- Scent: reportedly reworked. The 3.0 note list runs bergamot, cardamom, orange, lavender, rose, and geranium over the same sweet-musk base. Highly doubtful any of it lives up to promises.
- Price: up. The Hypnosis 2.0 ran $40-$60. Hypnosis 3.0 sits around $75.
What didn’t change: the pheromone claim, the same undisclosed starter-pack chemistry, the same checkout funnel, the same review pattern, and, from everything I and other testers can tell, the same null result.
New skin, same animal. If 2.0 did nothing measurable and there’s no disclosed formula change, there’s no reason to expect 3.0 to behave differently. I’ll update this the day I test a 3.0 bottle directly and it surprises me. I’m not holding my breath.
Where Cupid Fragrances came from
Step back from the bottle for a second, because Cupid Hypnosis isn’t a one-off bad product. It’s a textbook example of an entire category that’s been multiplying for about three years.
If you’ve watched TikTok ads in the men’s grooming space since around 2022, you’ve seen it happen in real time. A wave of “pheromone cologne” brands appeared almost overnight. Pretty bottles. Influencer budgets. The same emotional vocabulary copy-pasted across every label: irresistible, hypnotic, drives women wild. Fake-science trademarks slapped on the box, designed to look patented but meaning nothing the second you actually look them up.
Cupid Fragrances is one of these brands. Pure Instinct sits right next to it on the same shelf. Pherazone has been running the older version of the playbook since before TikTok was even a marketing platform. And there are a dozen more drop-shipped variants under names you won’t recognize, all working from the same script.
Once you’ve spotted the playbook on one brand, you can call it on the rest in about five minutes:
- The same three-molecule pheromone starter pack
- Emotional marketing vocabulary, effectively copy-pasted brand to brand
- TikTok-affiliate distribution, with paid commissions to the faces in the videos
- An aggressive checkout funnel – upsells, scarcity timers, the works
- A predictable TrustPilot pattern: glowing five-stars from accounts that have never reviewed anything else, sitting next to genuinely furious one-stars
Cupid runs every step. So do the others. The differences are cosmetic: bottle shape, scent profile, which influencers are on the payroll this quarter.
And it’s all aimed at one buyer. The guy in his early-to-mid twenties, questioning why his dating life sucks, and whether he can get the partner he desires. Everything is dialled in for that moment: the ad creative, the price point. Vocabulary that pokes at a half-formed worry about not “measuring up”.
Most of us have been that guy – I certainly was, twenty years ago.
The difference now is that the marketing machine is good enough to amplify it massively through TikTok and social media, and people still trust those in their social feeds with their buying decisions.
Honestly, the most shocking part about this kind of marketing is how easily people will lie straight to their audiences faces. Never trust an influencer with anything.
How Cupid tries to triple your order before you’ve smelled the cologne
Update: since I first tested this, Cupid appears to have toned down the worst of the checkout funnel – the most aggressive pre-checked upsells and fake timers aren’t as blatant as they were. What follows is how it worked when I bought my bottle, because the pattern is the real tell, and the current funnel still runs on the same bundle psychology, just with the volume turned down.
Here’s what happened, step by step, when I tried to buy a single bottle of the 2.0:
You click through from the ad. The product page shows the price, a discount already applied, and a “limited time” banner ticking down somewhere on screen. Hit “Add to Cart” and the first upsell pops: a travel-size bottle, pre-ticked, for an extra $19. You have to notice it and uncheck it yourself. Most people don’t.
Move toward checkout and the bundle nudges start. Buy two, get the third half off. Buy three, get the fourth free. Oh, and here’s the matching Cupid Lust to layer with your Hypnosis – two-for-one if you add it now. That “oh, and” framing is deliberate. Every upsell is dressed up as a favour instead of a pitch.
By the payment step, your $40 order is one of three things: still $40 (if you were paying attention), $90 (if you took the bundle), or $120-plus (if you took the bundle and the variant pairing). The funnel is happy with any of those… it’s clearly built for the bigger two.
Then there’s the fake urgency. Countdown timers. “Only 4 left in stock!” pop-ups that reset the second you reload the page. The “limited time” 10% discount that’s been there for months. None of it is real.
Compare that to how an honest vendor runs checkout. S1CK: pick the bottle, pay, done. Nothing pre-ticked, no bundle nudges, no fake timers. Pheromone Treasures is the same. The product is the product – you either want it or you don’t.
A brand confident in its cologne doesn’t need to triple your order before you’ve even smelled it. A brand that knows the cologne underdelivers has to work the funnel hard, because the customer almost certainly isn’t coming back. Which brings us to the reviews insisting it’s wonderful.
Are the TrustPilot reviews real, or part of the scam? (Is Cupid Hypnosis legit?)
Cupid Hypnosis 2.0 sits around 3.6 stars on TrustPilot across roughly 200 reviews, depending when you check.
That number isn’t the story. The distribution is. Roughly 46% are five-star. Roughly 38% are one-star. Only about 16% land anywhere in the middle.

In consumer reviews, that shape has a name. It’s called the polarized barbell, and it almost never happens on its own.
Here’s why. A genuinely well-liked product doesn’t pull 38% one-star reviews. Real opinion clusters: fours and fives when it’s good, low scores when it’s bad, a hump around three when it’s mediocre. Two opposing walls at five and one, with a hollow middle, isn’t what satisfaction looks like. It’s what astroturfing looks likeโฆ a stack of paid fives propping up a product the real buyers are furious about.
Read a few of the five-stars and it gets clearer. They tend to be:
- Three to five sentences long
- Vague about what the cologne actually did (“got compliments,” “noticed a difference,” “feels great”)
- Posted by accounts with one or two reviews total, often all in the same drop-shipped niche
- Time-clustered – five or six gushing reviews landing inside the same 48-hour window every few weeks
The one-stars read completely differently. Detailed, often long, naming specifics: the smell faded after an hour, the package took six weeks, support never replied, the return required shipping the bottle overseas at the buyer’s own expense. Receipts and timelines.
Read enough and the same story locks in. Someone buys multiple bottles off the ad. Tests for weeks, nothing happens. They try to return the unused bottles and get pointed at a fulfilment warehouse overseas, at their own cost. The return shipping costs more than the refund. The bottle gets kept out of pure resignation.
So is Cupid Hypnosis real or fake? The product is real – the bottle ships, the cologne exists, the company’s registered. The reviews telling you it works? Half of them aren’t.
The 30-day guarantee is built not to be used
Update: The company may have updated their previous returns policy of shipping back to China, where they were shipping from previously. There are now US return addresses on the Cupid website. But I still wouldn’t trust a company that engaged in such a shady “refund process” earlier on. This is left original so you can decide whether you really still want to deal with this or not.
The “30-day money-back guarantee” across the site like a safety net. Read the actual policy and you see what it really is. To qualify for a refund, the bottle has to be:
- Unopened
- Unused
- In its original packaging
- Shipped back to the fulfilment warehouse at your own expense
Read those back to back and the absurdity explains itself!
The entire point of buying a pheromone cologne is to test it. Spray it once – the only way to know if it works – and you’ve voided the refund. The “guarantee” only covers people who never opened the box. Those people aren’t asking for refunds.
For the people who actually have a complaint – tested it, watched it do nothing, want their money back – the policy is built so returning the bottle costs more than keeping it. When I ran this test, the return address was a warehouse in China, and international shipping ran $25-$40 depending where you are. The bottle was $40-$60. The math is the trap.
And that China return address tells you something bigger. When I tested this, the product shipped from China too – classic dropship. One Reddit buyer put it plainly: their order “shipped out of China” and wasn’t the American-made product the site advertised. (The newer Cupid Hypnosis 3.0 version may now route returns through a US third-party warehouse instead, but the product itself is still probably made in China.)
Either way, the “premium fragrance brand” positioning is a joke. You’re paying near $75 for the current 3.0 – for what’s likely a $4-$5 bottle out of a contract manufacturer, marked up ten to fifteen times over, with the marketing budget filling the gap.
The guarantee makes the purchase feel safe at checkout. But the moment you have an issue, fixing it costs more than the product is worth. Once you see the returns trap, Cupid Fragrances starts looking scummier by the minute.
New products: Cupid Lust, Ignite, and Charm – still not worth the money.

A standard Cupid product page shows four “variants”: Hypnosis, Lust, Ignite, and Charm. The marketing frames each as a distinct formula for a distinct effect – Hypnosis for “romantic intrigue,” Lust for “physical attraction,” Ignite for “social magnetism,” Charm for “everyday confidence.” Different bottle colours, different copy, different ad creative.
The chemistry tells a different story. All four list the same three-pheromone starter pack from the formula section. The named effects change. The disclosed compositions don’t. You’re being asked to trust four different products exist, on marketing copy alone.
The whole catalog is built around layering: Hypnosis on a date, Charm at the office, Ignite at the bar, Lust on a Friday night. The pitch is you need the full shelf to cover your life. But cycle all four and you’ll get the same null in every context. The line exists to lift the average order, not to hand you four tools.
Four bottles, one playbook. So if you’re still tempted, where do you even buy it?
Where to buy Cupid Hypnosis (and why I wouldn’t)
If you’re set on trying it, you can buy here:
- Official site (cupids.com): the current 3.0, around $75, wrapped in the upsell funnel.
- Amazon: often cheaper, sometimes down near $24 on a sale, mixed in with third-party sellers.
- Temu, AliExpress, eBay: $10-$35, and a flood of others. This is why I realized Cupid Hypnosis cologne is a low quality a dropshipped product.
Which raises the other “Is Cupid Hypnosis real or fake” question people ask:
The honest answer here is almost funny: The ones available on Temu and AliExpress ARE the same products that the official Cupid Fragrance store is selling – they’ve just absolutely packed their website with the most overhyped sales copy you’ve ever seen.
So no, there is no “genuine” Cupid Hypnosis cologne. If you want to spot a “fake” Cupid Hypnosis anyway: watch for $9.99 listings, mismatched or missing batch codes, no official packaging, and unbranded sellers shipping from overseas. But spotting the “real” one doesn’t get you a working product – it gets you the same null result at full price – because they are the same, with different marketing methods.
So where should you buy it? My answer is: don’t.
What to buy instead of Cupid Hypnosis 2.0
Every brand I recommend is independently formulated by experts & enthusiasts who have experiemented deeply with pheromones. They have long track records in years rather than months, selling through their own sites instead of a crazy marketing machine.
These are small operators that actually care about the quality of their products.
- Romantic attraction, strong emotional imprinting: True Love by S1CK, or Swoon by Pheromone Treasures.
- Social magnetism, the “easy room” energy: Avant Garde by S1CK, or the simpler Liquid Silver if you want most of the effect without the dosing fuss.
- Alpha presence, high-status positioning: Alpha-Q by S1CK, or Alpha Treasures by Pheromone Treasures.
Not sure which fits your situation? The full breakdown by use case is in Best Pheromones For Men – 2026 Edition. It lists what I’ve personally tested and the criteria I’d want a mate to use picking a first bottle.
A few things you’ll get from any of those that Cupid won’t give you: real disclosure on what’s in the bottle, a money-back guarantee that doesn’t involve an overseas shipping label, support that answers, and reviews from people who used the product for months instead of reviews that arrive in clusters every few weeks.
That’s the floor. Some of these are genuinely remarkable in the ways Cupid’s marketing was reaching for and missed. The good products exist. They just don’t run TikTok campaigns.
The final verdict on Cupid Hypnosis 2.0
If you came here because you saw the TikTok ad, hovered over the buy button, and felt a small hesitation – some quiet voice saying wait, let me check this first – trust that voice.
That hesitation is what brought you here. It just saved you somewhere between $40 and $75 (depending which version the ad served you), three weeks of testing a cologne that does nothing, and the specific aggravation of a money-back guarantee built to be unusable.
There’s nothing wrong with wanting what Cupid Hypnosis 2.0 promises. Wanting a small, real edge in dating and in the rooms that matter is one of the more honest motives a guy can have. The market is full of people who know that desire intimately and price it accordingly.
The thing is, real products in this category exist. Made by formulators whoโve been at it over a decade and actually stand behind their products.
Cupid Fragrances isn’t one of those companies. Cupid Hypnosis 2.0, Hypnosis 3.0 aren’t those products.
Spend the money on something made by companies who actually care about making quality products. You’ll know within a few weeks whether you got something real… and if you didn’t, you’d actually be able to return it.
- Joe Masters
P.S. Once you’ve spotted one of these brands, you’ll see them everywhere. Pure Instinct, Pherazone, the half-dozen knockoffs under new names rotating through your feed every month. Same playbook, same molecule list, same predatory funnel. The instinct that paused you on this one works on all of them.
P.P.S. Want the rundown of what I’ve actually tested and would recommend across attraction, status, and social magnetism? It’s all in best pheromones for men – 2026 edition. Find the category that fits, and order from a brand that earns the trust.
Cupid Hypnosis Cologne FAQ
Does Cupid Hypnosis cologne work?
In my testing across nine field sessions and three weeks, no. Cupid Hypnosis does not really work, and the formula does not actually do what the ads claim. Itโs a basic three-pheromone starter pack with undisclosed concentrations and no public information about the carrier system. The result is a fragrance that smells generic and produces no observable pheromone effects in real-world conditions.
Is Cupid Hypnosis legit?
Itโs a real product from a real company, so itโs not a fraud in the strictest sense โ but itโs not exactly legit either. Cupid Hypnosis is a marketing product with cologne attached. The brandโs actual product is the funnel and the marketing apparatus, with the cologne as the artifact that justifies the purchase. So if your definition of legit is โwill this do what the ads imply,โ the answer is no. And if the question is whether Cupid Hypnosis is a flat-out scam, also no. It sits in the gray zone where most modern drop-shipped pheromone cologne brands live: not technically a scam, but not honest enough to call legit.
Is Cupid Hypnosis cologne real or fake?
The product itself is real. Cupid Fragrances exists, the bottles ship, the storefront is live. Whatโs fake is what the brand tells you the bottle does. In my testing, the fragrance is generic, the pheromones produce nothing measurable, and the brand props up its rating with paid TrustPilot reviews to mask the gap between the marketing and the cologne. So: real product, real bottle, real shipping. The marketing claims about what it does, on the other hand, do not survive contact with a real-world test.
Does Cupid Hypnosis attract women?
In nine field tests across coffee shops, bars, gyms, and social settings, the cologne produced no measurable change in how women I encountered behaved. Working pheromone formulas produce subtle but consistent shifts in social baseline. Does Cupid Hypnosis really attract women in real-world conditions? Based on my testing โ no. None.
What pheromones does Cupid Hypnosis 2.0 contain?
The three pheromones disclosed in the ingredients list are androstenone (alpha/dominance), androstadienone (mood elevation, light bonding), and androstenol (social/friendly buffer). These are real pheromones, but the same three-molecule combination has been the default formula for low-tier pheromone colognes for over a decade. Whatโs missing โ concentrations, ratios, and the carrier system โ is where the real story is.
What are the notes in Cupid Hypnosis cologne?
The marketing lists vanilla, amber, musk, and spice. What actually shows up on skin is mostly synthetic sweet musk, a faint amber, and a generic woody-musk dry-down by hour three. The โaromatic fougรจreโ the brand promises has no herbal sharpness, no lavender backbone, none of the structure a real fougรจre would have. If youโre searching for cupid hypnosis notes hoping for a straight breakdown, the honest answer is the bottle smells closer to a 2014 mall body spray than a $50 niche fragrance.
How long does Cupid Hypnosis cologne last?
Three to four hours of weak projection at most, with the fragrance disappearing completely by the four-hour mark. For a $40-$60 cologne, thatโs poor performance. A $25 Zara dupe in the same fougรจre family will outlast it on skin.
Is Cupid Hypnosis worth the money?
No. The product underdelivers as a fragrance, produces no observable pheromone effects, and is sold by a brand whose checkout flow and returns policy are designed to resist refunds. Spend the same money on a brand from the Best Pheromones For Men guide instead.
What is PheroPureVXN?
Possibly a registered trademark belonging to Cupid Fragrances โ I havenโt been able to confirm the USPTO filing, and frankly, it doesnโt matter. PheroPureVXN is not a published formulation, a tested compound, a peer-reviewed methodology, or anything else with scientific weight. Even if Cupid did file the paperwork, all that means is no other brand can use the name. Itโs a marketing label dressed up to look like science. Thatโs the entirety of what PheroPureVXN means.
Are TrustPilot reviews of Cupid Hypnosis real?
The distribution suggests two parallel review streams. The five-star reviews share patterns consistent with paid or incentivized reviews โ vague language, accounts with no other review history, time-clustered posting. The one-star reviews read as genuine customer frustration with detailed, specific complaints. Read the one-stars carefully. Thatโs where the real customer experience shows up.
Can I get a refund from Cupid Fragrances?
Technically yes, in practice rarely. The 30-day money-back guarantee requires the bottle to be unopened, unused, and shipped back to a fulfillment warehouse in China at the customerโs expense. The fact that returns ship to China is also a strong tell that the product is drop-shipped from China to begin with โ which makes the whole โUS brandโ positioning a bit of a costume. Anyone who has actually tested the cologne has voided their refund eligibility, and the international return shipping cost typically exceeds whatโs being refunded. Plan accordingly before buying.
Whatโs the difference between Cupid and Cupids?
Same product. The brand is Cupid Fragrances (singular). The flagship product is Cupid Hypnosis 2.0 (also singular). But the most-searched form is the plural โ people type Cupids cologne, Cupids hypnosis, Cupidโs cologne, all referring to the same bottle. If you searched any spelling and landed here, youโre in the right place.
Whatโs a better alternative to Cupid Hypnosis?
For romantic attraction: True Love by S1CK Jewelry or Swoon by Pheromone Treasures.
For social magnetism: Avant Garde or Liquid Silver.
For alpha presence: Alpha-Q.
The full breakdown by use case is in the Best Pheromones For Men guide, including which to pick based on your specific situation.
What’s the difference between Cupid Hypnosis 2.0 and 3.0?
The 2.0 is the version I tested; the 3.0 is the current bottle, in the bow-and-arrow packaging at around $75. The 3.0 has nicer packaging and a reportedly reworked scent (bergamot, cardamom, orange, lavender, rose, geranium over the same sweet-musk base). What didn’t change: the pheromone claim, the same undisclosed starter-pack chemistry, the same funnel, and – from every account I’ve seen – the same null result. New skin, same animal. I haven’t tested a 3.0 bottle directly, and I’ll update this if I do and it surprises me.
Where can I buy Cupid Hypnosis, and how much does it cost?
The official site (cupids.com) sells the 3.0 for around $75 inside the upsell funnel. Amazon often runs cheaper, sometimes near $24 on sale. Temu, AliExpress, and eBay list it from $10-$35, where counterfeits are common. Here’s the catch: a fake does nothing, and in my testing the “genuine” bottle also does nothing, so the counterfeit just costs less to find that out. My honest recommendation is to skip it and put the money toward a vendor from the Best Pheromones For Men guide.
Is there a Cupid Hypnosis deodorant, and does it work?
There’s a Hypnosis deodorant in the same line, aluminum-free, marketed with a “Vanilla Ember” scent and the same pheromone angle as the cologne. I haven’t tested it directly, so I won’t pretend to review it. But it’s the same brand, the same marketing playbook, and almost certainly the same approach to “pheromones” as the cologne – the scent is the product and the pheromone claim is the marketing. I’d set expectations accordingly, and spend the money on a deodorant that’s honest about being a deodorant.
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Hi joe I heard that the pheromones in Cupid are made by lacroy South Africa , the same lab that makes NPA.
Highly doubt that. They have a “returns” address in China… even if Lacroy did have some part of it, this product is still low quality and mass marketed junk.