Men
Cocoa Bliss
Acordes principales
Descripción
Cocoa Bliss by Zara is a fruity-floral-gourmand fragrance for women. This creation, launched in 2025, is a new addition to the brand's collection. The nose behind this composition is Jordi Fernández.
Resumen rápido
Cuándo llevarla (votos)
Notas clave
Comunidad
201 votos
- Positivo 65%
- Neutral 23%
- Negativo 12%
Comunidad
Qué dicen los usuarios sobre propiedad, preferencia y mejor momento de uso.
Propiedad
¿La tienen, la tuvieron o la quieren?
Preferencia
Cómo valora la comunidad esta fragancia.
Uso recomendado
Estación y momento del día con más votos.
Dónde comprar
Compara tiendas verificadas para Cocoa Bliss y elige según envío, precio o disponibilidad.
Amazon
Envío rápidoEntrega rápida y política de devoluciones conocida.
Ideal si priorizas velocidad y disponibilidad.
Ver en AmazoneBay
Más opcionesMás opciones de precio, formatos y vendedores.
Útil para comparar alternativas antes de decidir.
Ver en eBayCaracterísticas
Resumen de votos sobre longevidad, estela, género y percepción de precio.
Longevidad
Escasa
Débil
Moderada
Duradera
Muy duradera
Estela
Suave
Moderada
Pesada
Enorme
Género
Femenino
Unisex femenino
Unisex
Unisex masculino
Masculino
Precio
Extremadamente costoso
Ligeramente costoso
Precio moderado
Buen precio
Excelente precio
Reseñas
Experiencias reales de la comunidad sobre uso diario, rendimiento y estela.
Para dejar una reseña necesitas iniciar sesión.
7 reseñas
Mostrando las más recientes primero.
Category:
Tonka, leather, and mango. Of the three Zara Cocoa 2025 scents (Bliss, Latte, and Sunset), my favorite is Cocoa Bliss because it suits my tastes as a woman better. It’s an elegant night scent. It has fruit, iris, and tonka. It smells quite almond-like, similar to Burberry Brit. Younger people might prefer the others since they are sweeter and gourmand, fitting the current commercial perfume trend. The Latte is like Caramel Cascade or Bianco Latte, and Cocoa Sunset is closer to Sol de Janeiro or perhaps the cacaos from Maison Tahité that I’ve already tried. It’s not groundbreaking; Cocoa Bliss isn’t novel to me, but it’s pleasant. I tested it twice on my skin at Zara. A certain metallic aftertaste keeps me from adding it to my collection, but I do recommend it.
I was choosing perfumes with my partner for her and discovered Cocoa Bliss; I read it smelled like passion fruit and tried it. I loved the opening—a very natural passion fruit—and within minutes, it blended with a chocolate that gave it a citrusy-sweet twist. When it dried, it was an incredibly rich fruity aroma with no feminine perfume vibes, so it works perfectly as a unisex. Smelling it alone, it’s just a rich and pleasant fragrance; I kept it and it’s part of my collection.
Unisex leaning feminine. Opening has an alcohol trail. The chocolate smells like cocoa powder. After a while, only patchouli remains.
I went to try this and the others from the Zara Cocoa line out of curiosity about the promised chocolate, and I left disappointed. The one that seemed most promising was this one; I imagined a tropical chocolate milkshake with passion fruit, but on my skin, it smells like generic sweet fruit. It could be one of those cheap ones from The Fruit Company that smell like mango for 10 euros less and last just as long. It’s not offensive; it’s cute and not too expensive, but I expected at least one of the ‘Cocoa’ scents to remind me a bit of chocolate, and it didn’t. If someone gave it to me as a gift, I’d wear it, but I don’t think it’s worth spending money on.
It’s a rich perfume with a brutal opening where all the notes are clear, but once it dries on my skin, it smells floral, which isn’t listed on the description. It’s good, but I don’t recommend buying it blindly because it evolves differently on my skin.
I love it; it smells like Brazilian cocoa butter, super delicious. Lasts about 5 hours on my skin and has no sillage. I wear it just to smell it myself because I’m obsessed.
On my skin, it’s just passion fruit, nothing else. The other notes aren’t noticeable at all. It’s a shame the chocolate, which was so promised, never shows up.