Since Hype Marionberry doesn't go for the whole sleek or sophisticated look, it doesn't suffer nearly as much from the kiddie font that "shot" uses like the previous Hype shot did. The bright blue is decent in working with the off white of the bottle, and while the label has feeble text scrolling upwards in the background, their small sizes prevents them from cluttering or adverting the eye's.
Viscous with a mild sweetness, the actual flavour begins a dull and fairly boring array of miscellaneous berries that are blended blandly. Cranberry is present the most on your tongue, but suggestions of blueberry and raspberry don't go unnoticed. The cranberry has a natural degree of tartness, but unfortunately there's a bit of a chemical bitterness inorganically tailored to its base, and while it's mild tasting itself, it handicaps the flavour unfairly. The former distressing prevents the aforementioned blue and raspberry hints from extending interest far into or past the cranberry, and as a result the experience tastes wholly one dimensional. The flavour climaxes with a favourable increase of sweetness, which cloaks a good portion of the earlier dire quality, resulting with a fairly smooth and clean conclusion. Overall, Hype Marionberry's taste wasn't disappointing but it was difficult to entirely finish.
Each bottle contains: caffeine, guarana, ginseng, taurine, and several B vitamins. Once fully drank, I began to feel energized slightly, and it continued to expand for two hours. It sustained this level for another half an hour or so, and I didn't crash afterward. Overall, Hype Marionberry Energy Shot feels thoroughly derivative and does nothing that the company should be especially proud of.
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