The Breeze Plus Edition is a small disposable that tries to stay simple while still feeling “complete” on flavor. I reviewed it because this size class lives or dies on draw consistency, condensation control, and end-of-life performance. Those three variables decide whether it feels dependable or disposable in the bad sense.

What is the Breeze Plus Edition Disposable Vape?
It’s a draw-activated, all-in-one disposable vape that comes prefilled and is meant to be used until it’s done. Listings for the Plus Edition commonly describe a mesh-coil design, about 3.5 mL of e-liquid, up to 800 puffs, and an internal 650 mAh battery, with 5% nicotine options and 0% variants sold separately.
Main risks are straightforward: high nicotine strength for many buyers, sweet flavor profiles that can push overuse, and the usual downsides of a fixed, non-serviceable device.
Why choose the Breeze Plus Edition Disposable Vape?
This fits adult users who want a medium-tight MTL to restricted draw without settings, and who take short sessions instead of long chains. It also fits people who prefer bright fruit or mint-leaning blends, where sweetness sits up front and cooling can be noticeable. Flavor-first users who want a small disposable, and don’t need multi-day endurance, usually land here.
Skip it if you need an ultra-tight cigarette-style draw, if cooling irritates your throat, or if candy sweetness wears you out fast. It also misses the mark for commuters who need all-day battery from one device, and for former heavy smokers who chase a hard, punchy hit from a small disposable.

How We Tested It
We ran a 3-day test using daily-carry patterns, landing around 100–300 puffs per day depending on the tester and the day. I focused on flavor accuracy, puff-to-puff consistency, draw behavior, condensation, and battery fade; Marcus pushed heat stability and chain-use; Jamal treated it like an everyday pocket device. The unit we centered on was the 5% version, with notes tracked on condensation at the mouthpiece, any leaking, flavor fade, and output drop near the end.
Performance Scores of the Vape
Test duration: 3 days, mixed use, roughly 100–300 puffs per day across the team
Scoring: 5.0 is best-in-class for this category; scores blend observable behavior with subjective taste notes
Device context: small disposable, draw-activated, commonly listed around 3.5 mL and 800 puffs
| Metric | Score | Remarks |
|---|---|---|
| Flavor | 3.9 | Strong first half, with sweetness leading; the finish thins out as the device nears empty. |
| Throat Hit | 3.7 | Medium impact at normal pulls; mint profiles feel sharper than fruit blends. |
| Vapor Production | 3.6 | Moderate output for a small disposable; longer drags add warmth and density. |
| Airflow/Draw | 3.9 | Fixed draw stayed stable; auto-draw responded cleanly on short pulls. |
| Battery Life | 3.4 | Matched a short-use pattern; output softened in the last stretch of use. |
| Leak Resistance | 4.1 | No liquid leaks during carry; light mouthpiece condensation showed up with frequent pulls. |
| Build Quality | 3.8 | Light body held up to pocket carry; mouthpiece seams stayed tight in normal handling. |
| Ease of Use | 4.6 | No setup, no controls, predictable operation; the tradeoff is no adjustments. |
| Portability | 4.7 | Very pocketable; it disappears in a coin pocket and doesn’t feel bulky. |
| Overall | 4.0 | A clean, consistent small disposable experience, with average endurance and a sweet-leaning profile. |

Our Testing Experience
Our Testing Results
I carried the Breeze Plus Edition for three days and treated it like a “between tasks” device: a few pulls, back in the pocket, repeat. Jamal used it the same way during commuting blocks, and he logged the most pocket time. Marcus did the opposite and ran back-to-back pulls to see where the device warmed up and where flavor started to flatten.
Across all three days, the draw stayed consistent. Auto-draw triggered without false starts, and I didn’t see misfires when I took short, quick pulls. Condensation showed up the way it does on most small disposables: a thin film at the mouthpiece after heavier sessions, not wet leaking. A quick wipe fixed it.
Battery behavior matched the size. Early sessions felt punchier, while late-life sessions felt softer, with less snap on the inhale. That taper was gradual, not sudden, which made it easier to pace without feeling tricked by a “cliff” drop.
Draw Experience
I tested Lemon Mint, Peach Mango, and Gummy Bear, since those flavors show up often across Plus/Plus Edition listings.
Lemon Mint hit first with a crisp top note, then it settled into a sweet lemon candy tone. After longer sessions, the mint stayed, while the lemon lost sharpness and started tasting more like a generic citrus syrup.
Peach Mango came across as thicker and rounder. On the first 50–100 pulls, it felt juicy and bright. Later, the mango sweetness dominated and the peach became more of a soft aroma than a clear taste.
Gummy Bear was the most “candy” of the three. It tasted saturated early, almost chewy on the inhale. After repeated pulls, the profile blurred into sweet mixed fruit, and it left a lingering aftertaste that stayed on the tongue longer than the other two.
Pros & Cons
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| Consistent auto-draw on short pulls | Sweetness can feel heavy over long sessions |
| Flavor is strong early in the device’s life | Flavor definition softens near end-of-life |
| Medium-tight draw works well for short sessions | Not ideal for people who need an ultra-tight MTL draw |
| No real leaking during pocket carry | Mouthpiece condensation can build up with frequent pulls |
| No setup or learning curve | No airflow or power adjustments |
| Small, light pocket profile | Easy to misplace due to the small size |
| Mint profiles give a sharper perceived hit | Cooling can be distracting for sensitive users |
| Predictable “taper” instead of a sudden drop | Endurance is average compared with larger disposables |
| Wide flavor catalog in many shops | Flavor quality varies by profile; candy flavors can fatigue |
| Common single-device pricing is mid-range | Cost per puff is not competitive versus 2k–5k puff devices |
Key Specs
- Device type: disposable, all-in-one, non-refillable
- Activation: draw-activated
- Nicotine strength: commonly listed at 5% salt nicotine; 0% versions also appear in listings
- E-liquid capacity: commonly listed as 3.5 mL
- Puff count: up to 800 puffs (listing claim)
- Battery capacity: commonly listed as 650 mAh
- Rechargeable: listed as disposable / non-rechargeable by multiple shops
- Coil / heating: Plus Edition listings describe a mesh-coil design
- Weight: 15 g (listing claim)
- Charging method: -
- Charge time: -
- Coil resistance: -
- Tank/pod capacity (separate from prefill): -
- Typical single-device prices seen online: about 15 depending on shop and flavor

Breeze Plus Edition Disposable Vape Vs. Alternatives
Choose it for a small pocket footprint, a stable fixed draw, and strong “front-half” flavor. It also makes sense when you want a straightforward disposable without cables or settings.
If you want longer run time in the same brand lane, Breeze Pro pushes higher capacity and puff count.
If you want a rechargeable disposable with far more puffs and a larger tank, Elf Bar BC5000 is a common step-up.
Pro Tips for Breeze Plus Edition Disposable Vape
- Take shorter pulls at first, then scale up. The flavor peaks early, and long first pulls can make sweetness feel heavier than it needs to.
- Rotate flavors if you vape frequently. Candy profiles, especially gummy styles, can blend together after repeated sessions.
- Treat it like a “session device,” not a marathon device. Short blocks tend to keep the draw cooler and the taste cleaner.
- If the mouthpiece starts to feel damp, wipe it once and keep going. Condensation tends to show up after higher-frequency pulls.
- Keep it upright when it sits on a desk or in a cupholder. Side-resting makes condensation more likely to move toward the mouthpiece.
- If you prefer a sharper hit, mint and lemon-mint profiles usually feel more defined than thick fruit blends.
- When output starts to feel soft, slow the pace for a few minutes. Chain pulls tend to make late-life performance feel worse than it is.
- Don’t judge the flavor on the last stretch alone. Late-life flattening is typical for small disposables, and it can skew your impression if you only use it near-empty.
- Buy one flavor you already trust first. Flavor ranges are wide, and a safe pick reduces the chance you get stuck with something tiring.
FAQs
How many puffs do you really get from the Breeze Plus Edition?
Listings often claim up to 800 puffs. Real results shift with drag length and session style.
Is the Breeze Plus Edition rechargeable?
Many shops list it as a disposable that is not rechargeable.
What draw style does it feel like?
It sits in a medium-tight MTL to restricted draw range, with a consistent auto-draw on short pulls.
Why does the flavor fade near the end?
Output and saturation usually taper as the device nears empty, and sweeter profiles show the drop more clearly.
Do mint flavors feel stronger than fruit flavors?
In my runs, mint-leaning blends felt sharper and more “hit-forward,” while fruit blends felt thicker and sweeter over time.
About the Author: Chris Miller