Philosykos EDP vs Do Son
Side by side. Scored honestly.
← Compare different fragrancesVerdicts
Philosykos EDP
A woody gourmand fragrance built around fig leaf, fig wood, coconut, almond, cedar. Scent profile not yet written in our editorial pass — the listed notes are the most reliable summary of the wear character until that's filled in.
Do Son
Tuberose leads hard in the opening — creamy, slightly rubbery, unmistakably tropical — before iris pulls it back toward powder and cool earth. Jasmine and orange blossom weave in through the heart, keeping things lush without tipping into headshop territory. Pink pepper adds a dry, faintly spiced edge that prevents the florals from going full bridal. Projection is moderate and sillage stays close by the dry-down, leaving a soft, skin-level warmth. Transparent rather than dense, aquatic-adjacent without any marine notes doing the work — just clean florals with air around them — A warm-weather daywear pick for someone who wants presence without aggression.
How they overlap
Philosykos EDP and Do Son share no notes in common — these two fragrances target very different olfactory territory, and the comparison is a question of which direction you want to go rather than which version of the same accord.
The buying decision
Do Son is the cheaper original at $155 compared to $310 for Philosykos EDP — about 50% less. Philosykos EDP has 2 scored dupes, with the top accuracy at 7/10 from Dossier Fig Leaf & Almond ($29–$35). Do Son has 1, top accuracy 8/10 from ALT Fragrances Ha Long ($39). On the budget side, Philosykos EDP's top-3 dupes start at $29 versus $39 for the other — the cheaper entry point belongs to Philosykos EDP.
Recommendation
Both Philosykos EDP and Do Son have credible top dupes (within one accuracy point of each other). The choice comes down to which scent direction you actually prefer — the descriptions above are the better guide than the scores.




