Epic Man vs Jubilation XXV Man
Side by side. Scored honestly.
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Side by side
Comparing the originals — price, breadth, listed-note depth.
Opens with a jolt of smoky agarwood and sharp spices before the incense rolls in and takes over — dense, resinous, slightly medicinal. The heart settles into a dry leather-oud accord that reads ancient and ceremonial rather than animalic. Amber smooths the edges in the dry-down without sweetening it much; musk anchors a sillage that stays close but lingers for hours. Projection is moderate, the statement is unmistakable — best worn in cold weather by someone who wants to fill a room without saying a word.
Opens with a dark, jammy blackberry that reads less sweet than brooding — almost ink-like — before frankincense and elemi sweep in and pull it toward cool, churchy smoke. The heart is dense: myrrh and labdanum build a thick resinous wall, cinnamon adds just enough heat to keep it from feeling static. Dry-down is where agarwood and patchouli take over, anchoring everything into a low, smoldering earthiness with serious sillage that lingers for hours. Projection is commanding without being aggressive — this wears like a statement, not background noise — Best suited for cold-weather evenings, formal occasions, or anyone who wants a fragrance that commands a room before they've said a word.
How they overlap
Epic Man and Jubilation XXV Man share exactly one note (agarwood). The overlap is real but narrow — most of the wear experience will diverge.
The buying decision
Epic Man is the cheaper original at $385 compared to $395 for Jubilation XXV Man — about 3% less. Both wear best across the same fall/winter — they're interchangeable on weather fit.