Allure Homme Sport Superleggera vs Platinum Égoïste
Side by side. Scored honestly.
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Side by side
Comparing the originals — price, breadth, listed-note depth.
Chanel's 2024 limited-edition addition to the Allure Homme Sport line, named for the Italian engineering ideal of light-but-powerful (superleggera). Olivier Polge keeps the citrus opening — mandarin and grapefruit dominate the first hour — before letting cedarwood and a clean white musk take over. There's no aquatic posturing here; the dry-down is dry cedar plus a soft patchouli-sandalwood base that reads as polished daytime rather than gym-bag freshness. Closer in DNA to a clean office woody than to the original Allure Homme Sport's marine register.
Opens with a sharp, almost medicinal blast of rosemary and petitgrain — brisk, green, and slightly bitter — before lavender softens the edge and pulls things into more civilized territory. Galbanum keeps the heart clean and slightly resinous rather than sweet, while jasmine registers as a structural note rather than a floral statement. The dry-down settles into warm sandalwood with a faintly herbal residue that lingers close to skin. Projection is moderate and dignified; sillage is present without demanding attention — a well-dressed signature rather than a room announcement — Fall and spring office wear, ideal for the man who considers fragrance a finishing detail, not a statement.
How they overlap
Allure Homme Sport Superleggera and Platinum Égoïste share exactly one note (sandalwood). The overlap is real but narrow — most of the wear experience will diverge.
The buying decision
Platinum Égoïste is the cheaper original at $130 compared to $165 for Allure Homme Sport Superleggera — about 21% less. Allure Homme Sport Superleggera is built for spring/summer; Platinum Égoïste for spring/fall. Pick by when you'd actually wear it.