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Fusion d’Issey Extrême

Nathalie Lorson
Perfumista
Nathalie Lorson
4.06 de 5
675 votos

Acordes principales

Descripción

Fusion d'Issey Extrême by Issey Miyake is an aromatic fougère fragrance for men. Launched in 2021, this composition is signed by nose Nathalie Lorson. The top notes unfold with the initial freshness of cardamom and bergamot; the heart reveals a combination of coconut, mineral notes, mint, lavender, and solar notes; while the base settles on sandalwood and patchouli.

Resumen rápido

Cuándo llevarla (votos)

  • Invierno 7.9%
  • Primavera 35%
  • Verano 36%
  • Otoño 22%
  • Día 65%
  • Noche 35%

Notas clave

Comunidad

675 votos

  • Positivo 76%
  • Neutral 15%
  • Negativo 9.2%

Pirámide olfativa

Estructura completa de la fragancia: de la salida al fondo.

Salida 2 notas
Fondo 2 notas

Comunidad

Qué dicen los usuarios sobre propiedad, preferencia y mejor momento de uso.

Propiedad

¿La tienen, la tuvieron o la quieren?

Uso recomendado

Estación y momento del día con más votos.

Dónde comprar

Compara tiendas verificadas para Fusion d’Issey Extrême y elige según envío, precio o disponibilidad.

Amazon

Amazon

Envío rápido

Entrega rápida y política de devoluciones conocida.

Ideal si priorizas velocidad y disponibilidad.

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Más opciones de precio, formatos y vendedores.

Útil para comparar alternativas antes de decidir.

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Características

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.

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22 reseñas

Mostrando las más recientes primero.

  • In my opinion, it’s clearly unisex, a little piece of an autumn forest you carry with you for your own enjoyment. I don’t think it will dazzle the general public, but it will surely surprise.

  • My first comment is about my past experience with Fahrenheit, but I’m starting in this world which seems interesting to me. Heads up: I know nothing. Today I went to a perfumery with a list to buy 3-4 fragrances (I’m 56, Harry Callaghan character but in a can). While testing samples from Loewe, Terre d’Hermès, Bvlgari, Jaipur, and Zadig, my girlfriend said: ‘I like this one.’ I smelled it and immediately said: ‘MUSHROOMS!’ (we’re enthusiasts of finding them). I’m describing the experience in case it interests experts. After applying several fragrances to my skin and taking a walk: smell of a wet forest after heavy rain, ground full of fallen leaves in autumn, a mix of damp earth and humus with a clear presence of mushrooms (boletus). I haven’t heard anything like it. Looking at reviews for the normal Fusion, people talk about coconut and fig; I don’t know if that’s what my girlfriend and I perceive as a delicious fungal smell. The scent is moderately intense, nothing overwhelming. Longevity is moderate. Maybe academic use is in summer because it’s refreshing, but I mark it for autumn due to the association of ideas. I rate it as daytime because I don’t think it will break in nightclubs (my 15-year-old daughter didn’t like it much; yes, however, she liked the vanilla in Zadig). In short, I’ve bought samples to experiment slowly, but directly bottles of Zadig and my canned boletus forest, under pressure from both sides. Harry Callaghan, I said? Happy, though it’s clear that women are in charge here. Enjoy it if it’s your taste.

  • It’s a spicier, more aromatic flanker of Issey Miyake’s Fusion. It performs well on my skin, though the trail is moderate. The construction is solid, the notes are enveloping, and it keeps you feeling very young. The patchouli is effervescent, wet, and balanced, avoiding any dated vibes. It starts fresh and quickly shifts to a clean, seductive spicy scent with a subtle sweet coconut touch. It’s less fruity than the EDT. That spicy autumn breeze really stands out. Perfect for a young, informal, or sporty guy. Women like it and it invites closeness. Wearable all year, day and night. It makes you look good and very current. A well-made perfume at a great price here. A hit from Miyake.

  • It’s a flanker of the Issey Fusion EDT, spicier and more aromatic than the original. On my skin, it performs well, though with a moderate trail always. It’s well-constructed, the notes are enveloping, and it comes off very youthful. It has an effervescent, wet, well-balanced patchouli. It doesn’t feel dated. The opening is refreshing and quickly transitions to a spicy, clean, and seductive aroma with a sweet touch from the coconut. It’s less fruity than the original. The spicy aroma stands out with autumn breeze vibes. Perfect for a young, stylish man with an informal or sporty look. It looks good and women love it, inviting closeness. Wearable in any season, day or night. It’s a well-made perfume at a good price. A hit from Miyake.

  • Although they say it has many notes, it’s very similar to the EDT. I own both, and the differences are subtle: the EDT is fresher and citrusy, while this one has more wood and body. The big difference is longevity; the EDT disappears in 4 hours, but this one can still be detected close to the skin for much longer. The weak point for both is projection, which is moderate to scarce, with this one being a personal bubble of about half a meter at most during the first hour. The scent is delicious on both, a forest sweetened by coconut, very different from designer scents, and I prefer this one. If it had better longevity and projection, it would be a 10. It’s very versatile, suitable for any season or moment, except formal parties. I keep both because I love them so much I don’t mind having two bottles, but if you don’t own any, buy this Extreme.

  • antonhofficial

    Total failure for me. I bought it blindly and it was the worst mistake. Hoping the coconut, mint, and lavender would blend well with sandalwood and patchouli, I was completely wrong. I didn’t like it at all. I’m already trying to sell it because it’s new; I’ve only worn it four times and after a whole day, I still don’t like the opening or how it settles on the skin. Don’t do it 🙏🏼.

  • antonhofficial

    I hated it completely… I bought it blindly and it was the worst mistake. Thinking of coconut, mint, and lavender, I expected something else, but it did nothing for my nose. I would have bought another fragrance and already am offering this one; it’s brand new. Just after 4 sprays, I’ve worn it all day and didn’t like it at the start or as it developed. Don’t buy blindly, please.

  • A unique gem from Issey Miyake where coconut takes the lead: warm, fresh, and aromatic with woody hints. Addictive and exquisite. It opens with sparkling cardamom, then blends mint, coconut, and lavender, closing with warm sandalwood. The coconut is noticeable throughout, like milky coconut water—creamy, not sweet or harsh… absolutely delicious. It has a marine-salty touch that, while timeless, instantly transports you to summer. It shares DNA with the original Fusion, but here the coconut shines brighter with more body and density. I’d 100% keep this. Clearly a more masculine aroma, versatile but ideal for spring/summer. Lasts about 6 hours on skin with moderate projection for the first hour or two, then becomes more intimate. Many might find it weak, but as an EDT, I have no complaints. If you’re looking for a masculine coconut scent (very far from things like Le Beau by JPG), give it a try. It drives me crazy when I smell it on my partner.

  • Issey Miyake surprises us with something different: a perfume where coconut takes center stage, warm yet fresh, aromatic, and woody. It’s addictive and exquisite. It starts with sparkling cardamom, moves to a heart of mint-coconut-lavender, and settles on a warm sandalwood base. The coconut feels like coconut water, milky but not harsh, incredibly rich. It has a marine-salty touch that transports you to summer. It shares DNA with the original Fusion, but here the coconut shines brighter and has more body. It’s more masculine, versatile, and ideal for spring/summer. Lasts about 6 hours with moderate projection at first, then becomes intimate. No complaints for an EDT. If you’re looking for a masculine coconut scent that stands out, give it a try. I get so crazy smelling it on my partner.

  • Von Bourbon

    This is a very well-constructed fragrance; the accord of cardamom, mint, lavender, and sandalwood is greater than the sum of its parts. The issue is that I just don’t love this coconut, which reminds me of solar milk—exquisite but definitely an aftersun vibe. It’s youthful and unisex, but if I had to change something, I’d ditch the coconut and add spices and star anise. Those are just my personal quirks.

  • Snagged the 100ml at a great price looking for a quality coconut scent and found it. It’s not the generic coconut everyone knows; it’s a rich, subtle coconut milk that, when mixed with mint, creates a delicious, slightly creamy result lasting about 8 hours on the skin. Projection is minimal and the trail is almost non-existent, but the scent, though intimate, is perfect: summery, fresh, and creamy all at once.

  • I picked these up at a good price for the quality coconut they promised, but I don’t feel that exact note; rather, it’s a rich, subtle coconut milk that becomes delicious, creamy, and lasts 8 hours on the skin with mint. Projection is minimal and it becomes intimate, but the scent is a luxurious summer vibe—fresh and creamy.

  • Luis Manuel howley

    In my opinion, it’s a silent killer. Its composition is so complex that, lacking high projection, when you’re face-to-face with the right person, they speak for you. Highly recommended for those single hunters who love dancing close.

  • It’s a fragrance with scarce trail and longevity, but it’s an incredible personal treat because when I wear it, I relax and it transports me to lying on the beach in the sun with sunscreen that smells like coconut.

  • Gentbries

    It smells to me like rotting wood in a swamp with a touch of coconut… A very sharp scent. I only see this for gentlemen over 50.

  • An unknown opening; I identify a type of acidic orange, slightly reminiscent of Terre d’Hermès, and the vibrant cardamomo accompanies the entire journey. Quickly, a vetiver emerges, which I don’t understand why it’s not listed—maybe my nose can’t dissociate the notes. It’s incredible how different reviews perceive different notes (fig, coconut, mushrooms, boletus, gasoline, old man…)—that’s typical of interpretations with a potent vetiver. Unbelievable; halfway through the journey, it starts smelling like Black Orchid by Tom Ford without the sweetness—what sorcery is this? They share almost no notes (the sandalwood?). If they told me it had black truffle, I’d believe it. The scent remains almost unchanged until the end. The path is peculiar, going from slightly creamy in the opening to astringent and dry, with unlisted aquatic nuances. Undoubtedly, it’s different, not just for this house, but challenging in general, full of contradictions. The least flat of the Miyakes I’ve tested, with greater intensity and trail; it stays strong after 5 hours. The one that resembles the brand the least, with barely a trace of the initial L’Eau d’Issey; the rest follows different paths, evolving and changing, much more complex and intense. Looking at the notes, I do detect a slight sunscreen touch, perhaps due to the sweet, creamy coconut. I don’t see it for summer; it seems possessive and dense from the second half onward, and I think it could be suffocating in high temperatures. A good choice for shoulder seasons (autumn and spring). Ridiculously low price for the quality and intensity; on my skin with 4 or 5 sprays, this looks like it could be eternal. I don’t know what category to put this hybrid in, and the most surprising thing is that I have no idea if I like it. Stay tuned.

  • Victortor

    It left me a bit cold. I’m a fan of Issey Miyake, but this flanker feels watery to me; it lacks body. It has a spicy and citrus opening, but the coconut note is already noticeable. That coconut note (more like coconut water than creamy) along with an aquatic and minty note dominate the heart. The dry down is still watery coconut, with something listed as metallic that I don’t detect, plus patchouli. The coconut never turns creamy, and the lack of chords to give it body make it dispensable. I’m not disgusted by it, but other scents in this category come to mind that I like more. It lasts just enough and projects less. Perfect for when the sun shines, from spring to late summer.

  • What a strange world fragrances inhabit. I’m tired of reading reviews of famous colognes and have tested almost all of them in-store. Practically none captivated me, and I didn’t understand the hype. However, this one seemed incredible, even though the reviews aren’t very favorable. It really smells like Kenzo Marine Intense but toned down, with the coconut note very present. Since I liked the Kenzo but found it overwhelming, this is perfect for me. It’s spectacular because they differ even more as they dry down. In conclusion, never let yourself be swept up by trends or mass opinions. It’s better to spend 10 minutes in a store than to buy a thousand perfumes blindly, incited by noses that aren’t yours.

  • JanBaptistRenui

    This was one of those perfumes where I said ‘wow’ upon testing. It has a sensational scent. I don’t identify that much-talked-about coconut on skin or clothes. I do notice the mint, citrus, lavender, cardamom, mineral notes, and a touch of rosemary similar to the basic Issey D’Issey Fusion, even though it’s not listed. It feels like a modern take on fougères, with a tiny nod to the original Eau Sauvage (remember, it’s not a clone or an obvious inspiration). I spray two times on skin and clothes, and both last over 8 hours in winter, with clothes still smelling of it the next day without issue. I love it.

  • This perfume has me divided. Here’s what matters: POSITIVE: It’s not a common scent. It smells like sunscreen with salty (mineral) touches, so it’s for summer, sun, and heat. The opening is sharp, bright, and minty, almost like a hint of Vick Vaporub. NEGATIVE: It doesn’t last or project, and it lacks the distinctive signature of the Issey Miyake line (usually the yuzu). Upon drying down, I get a smell of aged wood, like an old furniture drawer inherited from an aunt who hasn’t used it in 60 years. Of course, I won’t be buying it again; I’m sticking with the regular Fusion.

  • The quality of the raw materials is insane. If you don’t know this, you have no idea. It’s true that the trail and longevity are scarce, but then again, that’s how 99% of summer perfumes are.

  • I was looking for something cheap to gift, tried this, and I’m hooked. Bought it for myself at €30 without any hesitation. I already own 20 perfumes, and this is my new favorite for the office. It’s masculine, fresh, and spicy without being dark. The longevity and projection are solid; it’s not in ‘best mode’ like the Kenzo Homme Parfum, but for everyday wear, I prefer this. Hard to hate; I’ve worn it almost daily for a month, and it works. Value for money: 10/10.