Sour with both a grainy and a powdery mouth feel, the Mana's taste is mostly a blend of various one dimensioned flavours. Blue raspberry is certainly present, and thanks to the fluid's relentless sweetness, it resembles the sugariest of candies. There's a pineapple-like sharpness then noticeable, however the taste to the fruit remains nothing but a mild innuendo. Both lime and lemon can be identified, and the two play pleasantly with the aforementioned sourness. The dyad of citruses also produce the only degree of authenticity that the beverage is capable of radiating, but they're undesirably perceived only faintly. The prior duo's abbreviations' are brought about chiefly by the product's adamant sugariness, which becomes overwhelming even with its small size. The last few sips are predominantly languished due to the just former, and they're reached rather quickly since the drink offers only a handful of them. I would like to note, however, that the antecedent grainy and powdery texture is dually beatific and strange, and it's really the only thing to be praised. Overall, though an obdurate saccharinity is far more enjoyable than any inappropriate bitterness, my palate just didn't cotton to Mana Energy Potion's flavour.
Mana imbued me with a solid three plus hours of energy. It was surprisingly the source of many subsequent jitters, though there wasn't much of a crash. Each bottle contains: caffeine(160mg), various B vitamins, and taurine. Overall, Mana Energy Potion will be bought by those for who it's intended to, regardless of my middling opinion of it.
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