Scandal Pour Homme vs Le Male Elixir
Side by side. Scored honestly.
← Compare different fragrances

Side by side
Comparing the originals — price, breadth, listed-note depth.
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.
Opens with sharp, almost medicinal lavender riding a wave of cardamom spice — clean and barbershop-adjacent but with obvious muscle behind it. The heart softens as iris adds a cool, powdery depth that keeps things from going purely sweet. The dry-down is where it commits: thick tonka bean and vanilla settle into a dense, skin-hugging amber base with serious projection and a sillage trail that lingers hours past application. Rich without being cloying, old-school in DNA but polished in execution — cold-weather evenings, date nights, anyone who wants a crowd-pleasing statement that doesn't apologize for itself.
How they overlap
Scandal Pour Homme and Le Male Elixir share exactly one note (tonka bean). The overlap is real but narrow — most of the wear experience will diverge.
The buying decision
Scandal Pour Homme is the cheaper original at $100 compared to $130 for Le Male Elixir — about 23% less. Both wear best across the same fall/winter — they're interchangeable on weather fit.