The Raz Vape Flavors Guide: A Taste-First Tour of the Lineup
Pick up two RAZ flavors built on the same fruit, and you can land in completely different territory—one bright and icy, the other thick enough to coat your tongue. That's the catch with RAZ. The catalog is wide, the names rarely tell the full story, and the variety that makes the brand appealing is the same thing that makes it hard to navigate. The question worth asking isn't which device a flavor rides on. It's what the flavor actually tastes like.
This guide answers that. We'll skip the hardware tour and walk through the flavors themselves: how they group into families, where the sweetness climbs, how cold each one runs, and what genuinely separates a candy profile from a fruit blend from a soda recreation. Read it through, and you'll start sizing up the range by your own palate instead of guessing at a label.
1. How the Flavors Group
Strip away the marketing, and most RAZ flavors settle into a handful of families, each with its own signature on the palate:
- Bestsellers — Balanced, all-day profiles that never push a single note too far.
- Fruit blends — Layered flavors, usually one fruit on the inhale and another on the finish.
- The Gush series — Thick, syrupy, low on cooling, built around jam.
- Drinks and exotics — Soda recreations plus a few genuine oddballs.
- Frozen and Clear — Low sweetness, high cooling, sometimes barely flavored at all.
- Limited drops and code names — Desserts and blends hiding behind cryptic labels.
Find the family first, then sort by taste. That habit alone clears away most of the confusion.
2. The Bestsellers
There's a reason these four sell. They sit dead center—no heavy lean toward sugar or ice—so they hold up across a full day instead of wearing out your tongue by lunch.
Blue raspberry over a firm menthol spine: clean, sweet-tart, brisk, and free of the creamy "fluff" some brands fold in.
Sweet red watermelon under heavy ice. Think chilled juice, not green rind—succulent without sliding into syrup.
Menthol and spearmint, finished with a faint trace of citrus peel. Rounder and gentler than straight menthol, with a smooth landing.
Sour gummy worms, no apologies. It opens on a sour-powder tang and closes on tart apple and cherry gummy—comfortably the most candy-forward of the four.
The thread running through all four is restraint. Keep sweetness and cooling in check, and you land on flavors that suit a wide range of palates, which is the whole job of a bestseller.
3. Fruit Blends
This is the deep end of the catalog. The fruit fusion line layers several notes at once, usually leading with one fruit and trailing another on the exhale. The 1–5 ratings below are impressions, not measurements.
| Flavor Name | Profile | Impression (Exhale/Inhale) | Sweetness | Cooling |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Blueberry Watermelon | Blueberry + red watermelon | Tart berry inhale, juicy watermelon finish | ||
| Black Cherry Peach | Black cherry + ripe peach | Bold and woody, softened by sweet peach | ||
| Triple Berry Ice | Strawberry + blackberry + blueberry | Balanced mix; blackberry keeps it from cloying | ||
| Strawberry Burst | Red strawberry + candy coating | Bright, candy-style strawberry chew | ||
| Cherry Strapple | Cherry + strawberry + green apple | Cherry, then strawberry, then a tart apple finish | ||
| Strawberry Kiwi Pear | Strawberry + kiwi + crystal pear | A watery pear note refreshes the classic pairing | ||
| Georgia Peach | Single-note peach | Ripe, dense, juicy, with a faint candy edge | ||
| Mango Loco | Ripe Luzon mango + pulp | Thick and honeyed; no green-mango bite | ||
| Peach Grapefruit | Yellow peach + pink grapefruit | Peach sweetness cut by grapefruit's bitter acidity | ||
| Orange Raspberry | Orange peel + red raspberry | Zesty citrus up front, sharp raspberry finish |
The spread is wide enough to feel like two separate catalogs. At one end, lean and acidic pairings like Peach Grapefruit and Orange Raspberry hold back. At the other, Mango Loco and Georgia Peach pour out like nectar. Run your eye down the sweetness column, and most of the decision is settled before you've read a single tasting note.
4. The Gush Series
Gush is about texture as much as taste. These flavors lean into thick, syrupy sweetness with almost no cooling, so the jam runs the show, and nothing arrives to chill it back. The mouthfeel sits noticeably heavier than a standard fruit blend, and that density is the whole identity. To a palate that favors crisp and light, these will read as rich—maybe too rich.
Trades the menthol for a sticky blue-syrup finish.
Velvety peach laced with jam-style strawberry.
A dense reduction that lands like fruit leather.
A fruit-punch profile carried by pineapple and passionfruit.
5. Drinks, Treats, and Exotics
This is the experimental corner—soda recreations and a few profiles that flat-out refuse to sit anywhere tidy. The notes carry more weight here than anywhere else, because the names won't bail you out.
A French-style lemonade: sharp, cold, peel-bright, with no soapy aftertaste.
The strangest of the set by a wide margin—earthy, herbal, aloe-like, with a low, non-sugary sweetness. It doesn't pretend otherwise.
Silky and faintly milky, which rounds off the lemonade's fizz.
High-acid and punchy. The lime runs greener and sharper than Citronnade's, with a real cooling kick behind it.
Dense and cocktail-like—creamy coconut beside a dark-rum note, and no alcohol.
A close Skittles read, candy-shell texture and all, with a slight tingle on the exhale.
Genuinely odd, and people split hard over it. It starts tart and hands off to cool peppermint.
6. Frozen and Clear
Here the trade is sugar for throat hit and a deep freeze. A few of these barely bother with flavor at all, so the appeal is cold and clean rather than sweet.
The Frozen Series
Less sugar, more cold:
- Frozen Banana — Creamy banana popsicle with a sharp, icy edge.
- Frozen Cherry Apple — Crisp green apple and cherry under heavy frost.
- Frozen Juicy Strawberry — Watery, refreshing strawberry stripped of jam, with hard cooling.
- Frozen Dragonfruit Lemon — Chilled lemon softened by a touch of dragon fruit.
The Clear and Purist Line
The coldest thing in the range, built on WS-23. The freeze runs deep enough to make plain water taste cold afterward.
Unflavored, with the lightest touch of cool. Near-stealth.
An unflavored base carrying spearmint sweetness on the exhale.
An unflavored base with a hard menthol kick and no sweetness.
Dry, robust, Virginia-style roast over a faint caramel base. No ice, just a traditional throat hit.
7. Limited Drops and Code Names
The "Gem" Code Names
A few flavors ship under names that tell you nothing, so the descriptions do all the lifting:
- Tiffany — Kiwi and watermelon. Fresh, watery, medium-sweet.
- Vicky — Pink lemonade, cranberry, grapefruit. Tart, faintly bitter, bubbly.
- Ruby — Strawberry, cherry, raspberry. A bold red-berry stack.
Bakery and Holiday Releases
The heavy, dessert-leaning end, often tied to a season. These tend to sell out and may not return.
A savory, fruit-free bake of toasted honey, butter, and graham cracker.
Jammy strawberry over a dense, cakey base.
Toasted oat texture with dried-fruit tartness.
Sharp lime, sweet meringue, a salty graham crust.
Pure peppermint and sugar with an icy bite.
The lesson repeats: read past the name. A code word or holiday label tells you almost nothing, so let the tasting notes do the talking.
8. Device Map & Summary Guide
A Quick Word on Devices
Availability does shift across the hardware, so a rough map helps:
- TN9000 — Carries most of the bakery, creative, and "Gem" code-name flavors.
- DC25000 — Anchors the Gush line, the Frozen series, and most limited drops.
- RX50K — Stay close to the core bestsellers, with the RX50K notable for its high-intensity cooling.
Spot a flavor you want? Confirm which device carries it before you commit.
Reading the Range by Taste
A big catalog, three questions. That's the whole method.
- How sweet? Sweetness runs from low—Frozen, Clear, Peach Grapefruit—up to very high, where Mango Loco and the entire Gush series live. The fruit blends fill the middle.
- How cold? Cooling stretches from minimal (Gush, Georgia Peach) to extreme (Polar Ice, the Frozen series). The bestsellers settle into comfortable, all-day territory.
- What style? Candy flavors like Night Crawler and Rainbow Rain hit nothing like a juicy fruit blend, and neither resembles the drink-inspired or purist options.
Set those three side by side—sweetness, cooling, style—and the lineup snaps into focus. Use this as your starting point, then let your own palate finish the job.