Reviews of Allure Homme Sport Eau Extrême by Chanel


This is a decent fragrance that lasts all day, but I don't enjoy it due to personal taste.
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Fresh, sparkling notes of Italian mandarin are combined with green notes of Moroccan cypress. Enveloping notes of white musk, boosted by an almond accord of Venezuelan tonka bean gradually evolve into an intensely sensual aura.
A blend of sweet citruses with delicate mint seasoned with pepper in the opening. Warm and sweet tonka bean-sandalwood accord in heart. Equally warm and sweet base additionally enhanced with musk. All these stages result in the blend being seemingly delicate, yet rich.

It does smell like the original. But it is different. Sort of like taking a different route to get somewhere. Its got some more strength, and to me its a little sweeter. It has a textural difference. The tonka cream is enhanced by the sandalwood. The aldehydes are gone. I suppose it smells like todays man, but to me it smells like a girl. Blending and ingredients are good. I prefer the original. Neutral.


I get good performance
8/10

Smooth, a bit creamy. Very well-blended. The sage and Tonka bean here are exceptional.
There is an intrinsic, mellow sweetness amongst these notes, that screams quiet seduction. Indefinable, it may be the mandarin, musk, and sandalwood.
The exotic ride continues - I am not schooled on what a "sport" scent is supposed to be - I just know, as a chick, I would have no qualms wearing this.
Fresh, creamy, subtle, honeyed goodness all wrapped up in one fragrance. Well done, Chanel!
Sexy and it lasts...

The opening is great. As it transitions from the opening to the base, it can feel off to me. When the base is established, it smells good to me again.
During the opening, I think about replacing my 50-ml bottle with the 150-ml. Before the wearing is over, I decide not to replace it.


So here, Jacques Polge has molded the Allure Homme DNA with some hints of what was going around in the designer circles of that time, so bits of mint like Versace Eros (2012), and sweet orange like Paco Rabanne 1 Million (2008), with some cardamom heft from Yves Saint Laurent La Nuit de L'Homme (2008) too, and a touch of orange blossom from Gucci Guilty pour Homme (2011). Allure Homme's sparkling aldehydes are there, as is the creamy amber and musky sandalwood touched with vanilla, plus some of the aquatic facets carried over from what was then the most popular Allure Homme family member, Chanel Allure Homme Sport (2004). The writing is otherwise pretty much on the wall here. The added tonka and clary sage give a bit of hay-like pipe tobacco feel, which when mixed with the heavier woody-amber quotient and fluffy white musks, makes for a thicker, richer, slightly sweeter, heavier, and more-versatile take on Allure Homme Sport, hence being tied in with that line rather than just plain old Allure Homme. Performance is a very admirable 10 hours, although this is still Chanel, so even with a focus on night life, Allure Homme Sport Eau Extrême doesn't beat you down like a werewolf on a full moon.
Chanel never really has been good at kitsch, ostentatious displays of vanity, or just general extroversion by way of scent; so even the brand's take on a heavier attention-grabbing men's fragrance ends up being something else altogether. In this case, we get a beefier more year-round accidental signature fragrance at eau de parfum concentration that was likely the alternative for Bleu de Chanel (2010) until Bleu de Chanel Eau de Parfum (2014) came along for those who felt the sharp fresh violet focus of the original bleu was a bit too rakish. Even afterward, there are those who just never clicked with Bleu de Chanel as a fragrance, in any format, so Allure Homme Eau Extrême caused a lot of those folks to look further back into the rest of the Allure Homme range, seeing it's comprehensive collection of different flavors for different moods and situations, breathing new life into the line's formerly-floundering sales. If you absolutely hate the heavy-handed application of modern sweet tonka notes, Allure Homme Sport Eau Extrême won't win you over, although I find it to be the classiest (albeit also most expensive) take on the style. For me, it's one for when the weather is just turning a bit colder. Thumbs up

Sport is meant to be sport. However the Allure Sport is rather an uninspiring forgetful effort. Fresh but without substance. Certainly not unpleasant.
So hopes were high for the extreme. Fresh with a little bite? Some added interest?
Nope. Just something sweet to ruin any freshness.
Why not just produce one and get it right?
Or is it the Howard Moskovicz approach of trying to please all of the people some of the time with infinite variety? But it devalues a brand. Sport is already addressing the need for something fresh. Just do it right or is Chanel contracted to a particular nose so don't want to offend someone who produced a scrubber?
Phew.
Fragrance: 5/10
Projection: 7/10
Longevity: 6.5/10

Warm damp woods, cool airy breeze
Climb sniff live repeat.

Performance is good, projects nicely and lasts all work day.


I wasn't a fan of Allure Homme Sport, but I find this Eau Extreme version to be more palatable. I agree that it hardly seems like a sports fragrance… the dominance of clary sage / sandalwood in the opening distances it from the sports category. Also, this opening, with the help of mint, suggests to me that this fragrance wasn't meant for the younger fragrance wearer.
The remainder of the fragrance is uncomplicated… it is a straightforward but quite competent white musk, tonka and cedar accord… This accord is pleasantly edgeless and merely… suggestive… of a sports fragrance in tenor and strength (I think it should be a bit fresher).
Not an inspired fragrance, but it exhibits Chanel quality and Chanel class. I think the sport label suggests something that the fragrance doesn't really deliver, but then truth in naming has never been a strong element of the fragrance business. I believe that Allure Homme Sport Eau Extreme will rightfully have its devotees. For me, a somewhat hesitant thumbs-up.

I know the original sport has synthetics. But this is worse, the mint is very chemical smelling, and so is the vanilla.
It you're looking for a sports and fresh fragrance, the original EDT is much better, much fresher, less sweet, and the synthetics are less in your face.


Could not resist & bought it a month later.
Was really impressed with this stuff.
I get a heavy dose of mint & lemony orange on the top with hints of woods & creaminess. If i stay indoors it transitions into a semi sweet fragrance with hints of freshness from the top which i do not like as much.
This shines really well outdoors in the heat more than 35 deg. Celsius, where its top notes rise up & give a very fresh minty, citrus vibe with a very mild sweetness behind.
Love this stuff
Projection: 9/10
Longevity: 12+ hrs
9/10



Both are very wonderful fragrances for the same reason. That being a comfy, sweet and warm fragrance that I generally classify as "yummy" (without being gourmand).

When I think of sport fragrances, I think of a fresh, cologny and energetic fragrance that that puts you in an active mode.
This is more of a lay back, smooth scent that has class written all over it.
A powdery and a little sweet scent that frankly didin't blew me away. it has a very strange semell that really didin't remind me of anything; almost like smelling a rubber or something like that.
Don't get me wrong, is a nice smell, and a lot of people seems to enjoy it, but it didin't do anything to me.
The best part of this scent to me, is the vanillish dry down that is very nice. but nothing growndbreaking.
8/10
