Code Blue is the final rip it shot out, as well as the last rip it variety, including drinks, currently available for me to review. Its bottle is alike both of the two past shots, however I feel the bright, though far from light, blue really brings out the design's complete potential. The only complaint I gave to last shot, the angled sugar free banner, is present with Code Blue, and although I have a new complaint, the needless inclusion of the berry illustration, the bottle is mostly without problems.
rip it Code Blue's taste is, like many shots, simple at first glance and is mostly palatable. It begins a watery blueberry that isn't sweet but it has a certain dry tartness that's more authentic than the fruit. As the solution flows nearer your throat, the blueberry starts to resemble the level of naturalness that's displayed by the tartness. It grows a degree of sweetness that, despite consisting only of sucralose and ace-k, plays it genuine. The saccharinity is appropriately mild and ignores the onset addition of cranberry and grape. The sugariness prefers complete devotion in remaining convincing with the blueberry, which causes the grape note to lack the stern and apparent sweetness it organically embraces. The tartness of the experience, on the other hand, is able to bud and accommodate the cranberry with a different tasting tartness that's kindred in its success with the blueberry. The tartness soon, however, disregards whatever fruit it just previously adorned and surges as the flavour climaxes then consummates, and during the ascension there's a faintly noticed chemical bite that's almost always exclusively present with shots. Overall, rip it Code Blue's flavour is ambiguously clever in that it allows you to either focus and observe the fluid and detect its intricacy and depth, or allow each passing sip to be only of a robust blueberry.
Code Blue doesn't break the shot sub-line's tradition of providing mild buzz. I had at most two hours of energy and no jitters. Each bottle contains: caffeine(100mg), taurine, and multiple B vitamins. Overall, as the final rip it shot, Code Blue's marginally better taste and appearance make this the best of the trilogy.
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