Joyetech’s eRoll Slim Pro Full Kit is a pen-style, refillable MTL pod system built around a smart PCC with adjustable power (10–18W) and a small 2ml 0.8Ω pod, priced at $49.99 on sale. It’s strongest as a discreet everyday carry with quick, consistent puffs and genuinely useful on-case data, but it’s not for cloud chasing, long DTL pulls, or anyone who hates refilling often.
Product Overview
| Device | Overall Score | Pros | Cons | Ideal For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Joyetech eRoll Slim Pro Full Kit | 4.2/5 | Smart PCC screen + power control; clean MTL flavor; pocket-friendly | 2ml pod needs frequent refills; modest vapor; PCC adds bulk | Commuters, office breaks, stealth MTL users |
Final Verdict
The eRoll Slim Pro Full Kit nails the “stealth + control” niche: the PCC screen and power range make it feel more intentional than most pen pods, and the 0.8Ω refillable pod stays clean and consistent when you keep it topped up. The trade-off is simple: small liquid capacity and MTL-first output mean you’re refilling more often and you’re not getting big, airy pulls.
Who It’s For
- MTL users who want a slim daily carry with real on-device info
- People who like dialing power instead of “whatever the pod decides”
- Anyone who vapes in short, frequent sessions (commute, errands, work breaks)
Who It’s Not For
- DTL users or anyone chasing dense clouds
- People who hate refilling 2ml pods during the day
- Users who want a device with zero “ecosystem” pieces (pen only, no case)

How We Tested
We ran the device across commuting, desk breaks, and evening sessions, rotating a few familiar e-liquids and tracking consistency over repeated refills. Flavor, Throat Hit, and Vapor Production were scored by short sets of identical puffs at multiple power settings. Airflow/Draw and Ease of Use were judged by pocket-to-puff speed and misfire rate, while Battery Life was tracked by puff-count and recharge cycles through the PCC. Leak Resistance, Build Quality, and Portability were assessed by pocket carry, contact cleanliness, and condensation control.
Our Testing Experience
Day one, I set the PCC to 14W and used the standard drip tip for a full commute; the draw felt tight and predictable, and the mouthfeel stayed “thin-smooth” instead of scratchy. When we bumped it to 17W later, the pod warmed up fast and the flavor edges sharpened—bright notes popped, but it also made sweet blends feel heavier on the tongue after a few back-to-back pulls. Marcus tried to muscle it like a mini high-output device and immediately hit the ceiling: it’s an MTL tool, not a cloud stick. Jamal loved the pocket rhythm—pen in pocket, PCC in bag, quick two-minute sessions—and the puff counter made it easy to notice when “one quick hit” quietly turned into a habit loop.
Across the week, the PCC consistently showed the pod hovering around 0.8Ω (ours typically read ~0.82Ω), and a full PCC got us about 3 full pen recharges plus a partial before it needed a wall charge. Condensation was the main maintenance theme: not messy leaking, but that light film you feel on the drip tip if you chain short puffs without a quick wipe.
What we liked
- Smooth, controlled MTL pull with clean flavor definition
- Power range feels meaningful; 14–16W was the sweet spot
- PCC screen makes daily use more “instrumented” than typical pens
Who it is best for
- Adults who vape in short bursts and want consistency
- People who prefer tight MTL draw and moderate vapor
- Users who value pocketability but still want power control
Where it falls short
- 2ml refills are frequent if you’re a heavy sipper
- Vapor is intentionally modest; it won’t satisfy DTL habits
- Drip tip hygiene takes attention (condensation, not catastrophic leaks)

Pros & Cons
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| Tight, consistent MTL draw | 2ml pod refills add up fast |
| Adjustable 10–18W via PCC | Vapor output stays modest by design |
| PCC screen shows key data | PCC adds “second piece” to carry |
| Refillable 0.8Ω pod runs clean | Condensation needs routine wipe-down |
| Dual charging options for the pen | Not a good match for DTL users |
Details
- Price: $49.99
- Device type: refillable MTL pod system with PCC (portable charging case)
- Power: adjustable 10–18W (18W max) via PCC
- Pod: 2ml refillable, 0.8Ω built-in coil; side-fill design
- Battery: 480mAh pen + 2000mAh PCC
- Charging: USB-C for PCC (5V/2A); pen supports USB-C (5V/1A) and magnetic wireless charging
- Size: pen φ16 x 119.8mm; PCC 107 x 47.3 x 22.8mm
- In the box: PCC, pen battery, 0.8Ω cartridge, standard + narrow 510 drip tips, USB-C cable, manual/warranty

Review Score
| Metric | Score | Remarks |
|---|---|---|
| Flavor | 4.3 | Clear top-notes at mid power; stays clean if you avoid chain pulls |
| Throat Hit | 4.2 | Smooth MTL hit with controllable warmth across the power range |
| Vapor Production | 3.6 | Intentionally restrained; satisfying for MTL, underwhelming for DTL |
| Airflow/Draw | 4.4 | Consistent tight draw that doesn’t “wander” from puff to puff |
| Battery Life | 4.1 | Pen is small, but the PCC makes the whole kit reliably multi-session |
| Leak Resistance | 4.0 | No messy leaking in our pockets; light condensation needs upkeep |
| Build Quality | 4.3 | Solid fit, clean magnetic mating, and sturdy everyday handling |
| Ease of Use | 4.6 | Draw-activated, no button workflow; PCC makes settings simple |
| Portability | 4.7 | Pen disappears in a pocket; PCC is still small enough to live in a bag |
| Overall | 4.2 | Best-in-class “stealth + control” kit, held back mainly by 2ml capacity |
Choosing Fit
If you want a tight MTL draw, moderate vapor, and the ability to fine-tune power without turning your pocket into a toolbox, this kit fits. Prioritize it if you value portability, on-case data (puff count/resistance/power), and you don’t mind refilling a 2ml pod. Skip it if your baseline is airy DTL, heavy all-day chain use, or you want bigger pods.
For typical scenarios:
- Want similar simplicity but a more “standard” pod ecosystem: Vaporesso XROS series
- Want a compact MTL daily carry with strong consistency: Uwell Caliburn G-series
Limitations
This kit is engineered around a specific style of vaping: short, controlled MTL sessions, not long high-output runs.
- Frequent refills: 2ml goes quickly for heavy users
- Vapor ceiling: limited satisfaction for DTL habits
- Maintenance is “small but constant”: wipe drip tip/contacts to manage condensation
Joyetech eRoll Slim Pro Full Kit vs Alternatives
Why choose these models
- You want adjustable 10–18W control and visible puff/resistance/power on the PCC
- You prefer a tight, discreet MTL profile over big output
- You like 510 drip tip flexibility for comfort tuning
Alternatives to consider
- Vaporesso XROS series: broader pod options, often better for heavier daily volume
- OXVA Xlim series: strong flavor focus with a more “pod-first” mainstream ecosystem
- Uwell Caliburn G-series: reliable MTL feel with widely available consumables
Pro Tips for Joyetech eRoll Slim Pro Full Kit
- Start mid-power (around 14–16W) before pushing to 18W; it keeps sweetness from getting cloying
- After filling, give the pod a few minutes before the first long session to avoid early dry-edge flavor
- Keep a tissue in the PCC pocket of your bag; wipe the drip tip daily to manage condensation
- If flavor dulls, check the PCC resistance reading and replace the pod before it turns “papery”
- Don’t overfill—leave a little headspace to reduce pressure seepage around the fill area
- Clean the magnetic contacts (pen + PCC) weekly; pocket lint is the silent enemy
- Use the narrow drip tip when you want a tighter, more cigarette-like mouthfeel; swap back for longer relaxed pulls
- Treat the PCC as your “control center”: adjust power and reset puff counts when you want cleaner tracking
- If you chain-puff, lower power a step; it reduces heat buildup and keeps blends tasting accurate
FAQs
Does it feel like true MTL or a loose pod draw?
It lands firmly in MTL territory with a tight, consistent pull. If you’re used to airy pods, it will feel more restrictive and more “cigarette-adjacent.”
How often am I refilling the pod?
With a 2ml pod, light users can cruise; heavier users will refill multiple times per day.
Is the PCC screen actually useful day to day?
Yes—seeing puff count, resistance, and power makes it easier to notice behavior patterns and keep the device dialed.
Any common maintenance pain points?
Mostly condensation and contact cleanliness, not dramatic leaking. A quick wipe routine keeps it feeling fresh.
About the Author: Chris Miller