Le Male (Original EDT) vs Scandal Pour Homme
Side by side. Scored honestly.
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Side by side
Comparing the originals — price, breadth, listed-note depth.
Cool mint and bergamot hit first — clean, slightly medicinal, with a barbershop edge from the lavender underneath. The heart settles into that iconic mint-lavender pairing, warmer and rounder than it opens, with cinnamon adding just enough spice to keep it from reading as purely fresh. The dry-down is where it earns its reputation: vanilla and tonka bean wrap everything in a soft, powdery sweetness that projects with moderate sillage and lingers for hours without going loud. The base is warm but never cloying — a dressed, confident finish — Fall and winter evenings out, or any situation where smelling put-together matters without trying too hard.
Opens with a thick, almost edible hit of honey and caramel that reads indulgent but never juvenile — the tobacco arrives quickly to anchor it, pulling the sweetness into something drier and more credible. In the heart, tonka bean rounds out the tobacco with a soft, nutty warmth while benzoin adds a faint resinous depth. The dry-down is the payoff: vetiver cuts through the gourmand richness, leaving a smoky-sweet trail that projects moderately and clings close by the final hours — a well-mannered but unmistakably present sillage. — Fall and winter evenings, date nights, or anyone who wants gourmand sweetness grounded by real tobacco weight.
How they overlap
Le Male (Original EDT) and Scandal Pour Homme share exactly one note (tonka bean). The overlap is real but narrow — most of the wear experience will diverge.
The buying decision
Le Male (Original EDT) is the cheaper original at $85 compared to $100 for Scandal Pour Homme — about 15% less. Le Male (Original EDT) covers 4 seasons (spring, summer, fall, winter) — wider weather range than Scandal Pour Homme, which leans fall/winter-only.