FLAVOUR GUIDE
Flavour names often combine several fruits, a cooling term and a creative product name. A good choice begins with understanding every part of the profile.

Choose a broad flavour family first, then identify cooling, sweet, dessert or drink-style additions. Finally check whether the name describes one flavour or the full group inside a multi-flavour device.
Recognise the main flavour families
Fruit profiles may centre on berry, citrus, tropical fruit, melon, grape or mixed fruit. Ice, cool or freeze usually signals a cooling element rather than a separate fruit.
Dessert and drink-style names can combine cream, candy, cola, energy drink or cocktail references. Read the whole name instead of assuming from the first word.
Single flavour versus a flavour group
A single-flavour device normally has one profile for its full life. A multi-flavour product can list several separate profiles in one variation.
Separators such as a slash, plus sign or numbered group may indicate a fixed combination. The selector does not normally let you create any arbitrary combination.
Use the SKU to avoid look-alike options
Long option lists can contain similar names with one fruit or cooling term changed. The variation SKU is the most dependable short identifier for the selected option.
Check the SKU in the basket and order confirmation, especially when the product image shows several colour variants together.
Final checklist
- Identify the main fruit, dessert or drink family.
- Look for ice, cool, freeze or sweet modifiers.
- Decide whether the name is one profile or a group.
- Read every flavour in a multi-flavour variation.
- Confirm nicotine strength separately.
- Match the variation SKU in the basket.
Editorial method: Flavour descriptions organise catalogue wording into understandable groups; taste remains subjective. No health, treatment or risk-free claim is inferred from a flavour name.


