X22 is one of the most underrated, sexiest, social powerhouse pheromone products available. It's fun, memorable, attractive... but the most intriguing part? It's not just for being "social"... Hax Pheromones hasn't been given enough credit on the site, so I decided to start off reviews for their products with a bang... One of my favorite "social" products, X22. Although it's classified as a
Hax Pheromones
Hax Pheromones is gone now. The brand went quiet years ago and never came back, but for a stretch there it made some of the most heavily loaded pheromone oils you could buy, and a few of them are still worth knowing about. This page keeps the record straight: who they were, what each product actually did, and where to go for the one we tested to death.
Sometimes styled "HAX Pheroceuticals," the brand had a reputation for cramming far more active material into a bottle than most vendors dared to. The oils ran thin and the self-effects hit hard. If you wanted subtle, you bought elsewhere. Hax built blends you could feel coming on.
What made Hax worth remembering
Most of the line leaned social and status rather than raw sexual. That was the house style: products that made a room warmer to you, made people remember you, and nudged your own confidence up a notch.
People kept saying the same thing about Hax mixes. They just made life easier. Walk in, talk to anyone, get treated like you belonged.
Five products carried the brand. Here is the short version of each.
The Hax lineup
X22: the social powerhouse
The flagship, and the one product on this page with a full review. X22 is a social mix with absurd self-effects, the kind that can drag you out of a quiet, heads-down mood and have you wanting to go out. It is magnetic, a little sexy, and memorable enough that people you met once will greet you like an old friend the next time around. It also doubles as a rescue tool: drop some on top of an aggressive mix gone wrong and it softens the whole thing back into something warm and likeable.
C4: odorless alpha
The status play. C4 runs close to odorless, which made it the easy daily-wear option for work and anywhere a heavy scent would be a problem. It built quiet respect and a high-status read on you over the day rather than hitting instantly. Slower to show up than X22, but clean, and it stacked well with the rest of the line.
M512: the attraction mix
This was the pull. M512 leaned harder into attraction and club use, with a noticeable magnetism and a scent that played nicely layered under other products. Solid social response in the daytime, more bite at night. For a lot of testers it was the standout of the oil pack.
Wingman Black: the nighttime mix
Built for the club. Wingman Black sat right on the line between status and attraction, the sort of thing you reached for on a night out rather than a Tuesday at the office. Strong presence, made for crowds and low light.
Holy Grail: Wingman with more heat
The close cousin to Wingman Black, tuned a touch more sexual. Same nighttime, high-energy character, dialed slightly further toward attraction. It could run unpredictable depending on the wearer, so it rewarded a bit of experience, but at its best it carried the same head-turning pull the rest of the line was known for.
The one we put through its paces
Of the whole Hax catalogue, X22 is the one that earned a full breakdown on the site. If you only read about one Hax product, make it that one. It is the most complete picture of what this brand could do when a blend really landed.
