
Scentonym Analysis
Our objective metric for performance per dollar.
Notes & Nuances
Intense Peach bursts open with a sugary peach candy, less photorealistic than Tom Ford’s Bitter Peach. The blood orange adds a juicy sweetness, cut with a slight cardamom spice. It's about 84% similar to the original's opening, but the synthetic edge is undeniably present. The boozy heart of rum and cognac emerges next, though it’s less refined. The davana adds a fruity-herbal complexity. Where this clone really diverges is in the base. The patchouli is amped up, adding an earthy bitterness that wasn’t as prominent in Bitter Peach. The vanilla is sweeter, the sandalwood creamier. It's a bold, gourmand take that sacrifices some nuance for boldness.
How Long Does it Last?
Longevity is surprisingly decent. I get around 6-7 hours on skin, with moderate projection for the first 2 hours. It then settles into a skin scent. It outperforms some designer fragrances in this regard.
Conclusion
Intense Peach is for the confident individual. Someone who enjoys a bold, sweet statement. It's for nights out, for dates, for moments where you want to leave an impression. It's not a sophisticated masterpiece, but it's a fun, flirty fragrance. But if you want the vibe, the sweetness, and the confidence, Intense Peach delivers a solid approximation . A worthy substitute for a specific mood.
Performance Audit
Based on average wear time
Sillage & radius
Relative to market avg
Why we track this:
Price Arbitrage: Significant savings compared to the original Tom Ford pricing.
Community Verified: Cross-referenced against 354 enthusiast votes for accuracy.