In our testing, the RAZ DC25000 felt like a rechargeable disposable built for long stretches of everyday use. The big-screen experience, adjustable airflow, and two power modes make it more involved than a basic stick, while the trade-off is size. It makes the most sense for adult nicotine users who want strong flavor and fewer device swaps, not for anyone chasing the smallest carry or a very tight, cigarette-like draw.
Table of Contents
Product Overview
| Device | Overall Score | Pros | Cons | Ideal For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| RAZ DC25000 | 4.2/5.0 | Dense flavor, useful screen, adjustable airflow, strong longevity | Bulky in slim pockets, Boost runs warmer, sweet profiles can wear on you | All-day users, commuters, screen-and-control fans |
Final Verdict

In our hands-on use, the RAZ DC25000 worked best as a long-running disposable with a screen you actually check and airflow you can tune without fuss. The trade-off is straightforward: it is larger than many disposables, and Boost mode brings more heat and faster drain.
Who It’s For
- Adult users who want a device that lasts and does not need constant swapping
- People who like adjusting airflow instead of living with a fixed draw
- Users who enjoy bright, sweet, high-impact profiles
Who It’s Not For
- Shoppers who want the smallest possible pocket carry
- Users who are sensitive to warmer vapor in higher-output modes
- Vapers who prefer muted, low-sweetness flavor styles
How We Tested It
We used the device in commutes, short work breaks, and longer evening sessions, following our hands-on testing process and tracking Flavor, Throat Hit, Vapor Production, Airflow/Draw, Battery Life, Leak Resistance, Build Quality, Ease of Use, and Portability. We rotated airflow positions and both modes to see how the device changed across quick pulls and longer sessions. This review reflects adult-use testing notes, not medical advice.
Our Testing Experience

We started in Regular mode with the airflow a little under halfway open. That setting gave the device its best balance: dense flavor, a steady draw, and a finish that stayed consistent from puff to puff. The screen turned out to be genuinely useful rather than decorative; a quick glance showed battery and liquid levels before the device went back in a pocket. On our scale, the unit came in at about 72 g, so it carried more like a small gadget than a slim stick. In hands-on use, the real-world puff count landed closer to about 23,500–24,500 in Regular mode on standard 2–3 second draws, while Boost felt more like a shorter lane around 14,000–15,000. Marcus preferred Boost for thicker vapor, but repeated pulls made it noticeably warmer. Jamal, who tends to pocket-carry devices all day, liked that the mouthpiece stayed relatively clean and the body handled daily carry without much mess.
What we liked
- Consistent draw activation and a satisfying, dense in-mouth pull
- Airflow control that meaningfully changes the character of the hit
- The screen makes battery and liquid management easy
Who it is best for
- Adults who vape frequently and want fewer device swaps
- Users who like a moderately open MTL to restricted-DL range
- People who value at-a-glance status while traveling
Where it falls short
- Chunkier than many disposables, especially in slim jeans
- Boost mode can run warm under heavy, repeated pulls
- Sweet flavor styles can feel loud if you prefer subtle profiles
Pros & Cons
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
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Details

- Price: usually around $17–$30
- Device type: rechargeable disposable
- Nicotine strength: 5% (50mg) nicotine salt
- E-liquid capacity: 16 mL
- Battery: Rechargeable battery; our test unit weighed about 72 g in pocket
- Charging: USB Type-C
- Modes/output: Regular and Boost modes; up to 25,000 puffs in Regular mode, with shorter life in Boost
- Core hardware: mesh-coil setup, adjustable airflow, screen with battery and e-liquid indicators, light/dark display themes
Review Score
| Metric | Score | Remarks |
|---|---|---|
| Flavor | 4.4 | Dense, consistent flavor; best when airflow is mid-open |
| Throat Hit | 4.2 | Assertive at 5%; Boost adds punch but can feel sharper |
| Vapor Production | 4.3 | Regular is balanced; Boost thickens clouds noticeably |
| Airflow/Draw | 4.1 | Useful adjustment range, though very tight MTL is not its strength |
| Battery Life | 4.2 | Rechargeable and steady; heavy Boost sessions shorten cycles |
| Leak Resistance | 4.3 | Stayed clean in pockets with minor condensation management |
| Build Quality | 4.1 | Feels solid in hand; bulk and slider movement are the trade-offs |
| Ease of Use | 4.4 | Draw-activated, readable screen, and low day-to-day fuss |
| Portability | 3.8 | Easy enough to carry, but the size and weight stay noticeable |
| Overall | 4.2 | Feature-rich long-run disposable with a few comfort trade-offs |
How to Choose the RAZ DC25000 Vape?
Choose the DC25000 if you want a high-capacity disposable with a screen, adjustable airflow, and two distinct power settings. It suits adult users who take both quick breaks and longer sessions and want more feedback from the device than a basic stick gives them. Pass if you want the smallest carry or a tight MTL draw. For a similar high-output, screen-forward experience, Geek Bar Pulse X is the closest match. If pocket comfort matters more, Lost Mary MT15000 Turbo is the easier carry.
Limitations

The DC25000’s strengths come with trade-offs that showed up quickly in daily carry and repeated use.
- Bulk and weight are noticeable in slimmer pockets
- Boost mode can run warmer under repeated pulls
- Sweet-forward flavor style is not ideal for subtle-profile users
- The airflow control can shift if the device rides loose with keys or coins
RAZ DC25000 Vape Vs. Alternatives
Why choose these models
- A screen and indicators reduce guesswork during long-use days
- Adjustable airflow lets you tune the draw instead of accepting the stock setting
- Dual-mode behavior gives you a steadier lane and a punchier lane
Alternatives to consider
- Geek Bar Pulse X: similar feature set and a more aggressive output feel
- Lost Mary MT15000 Turbo: easier pocket carry with a balanced, reliable hit
- Flonq Max Pro: another long-run option in the same category if you want a different overall feel
Pro Tips for RAZ DC25000 Vape
- Treat Boost mode as something to use in short bursts, then drop back to Regular to keep heat and harshness under control.
- Set your airflow setting before you leave the house. A mid-open position usually balances throat hit, flavor clarity, and condensation better than fully closed.
- If the mouthpiece starts to feel wet, wipe the tip and open the airflow slightly instead of pulling harder.
- Keep it out of hot cars and direct sun. Heat can make sweet flavors taste louder and the last stretch of the device feel less clean.
- Use a basic 5V charger rather than a fast-charge brick if you want steadier charging behavior.
- If you pocket-carry, keep it away from lint-heavy fabrics. A quick daily wipe around the mouthpiece helps keep grime down.
- Do not chain-hit on Boost in cold outdoor air. The temperature swing can make the vapor feel sharper and drier.
- When flavor starts to flatten, check what causes flat flavor before you assume the device is done.
- If you rotate flavors, keep a mint reset profile in the mix so your palate does not get stuck in syrupy notes all week.
FAQs
Does the DC25000 feel more like MTL or DL?
It lands in a moderately open MTL to restricted-DL range, especially with the airflow opened up; fully closed still is not a cigarette-tight pull.
Is Boost mode worth using?
Yes, in short bursts. It thickens vapor and intensifies the hit, but it can run warmer and feel sharper if you chain it.
How accurate is the screen’s e-liquid indicator?
It is useful for pacing, but it is not perfectly linear. For better reads near the end of the device, it helps to know how to tell a disposable vape is almost empty.
Does it leak in a pocket?
In our daily carry it stayed clean with minor condensation management, which is usually what people care about most when they ask about pocket leaks.
Is it a good “first disposable” for a new vaper?
Only if you are already comfortable with higher nicotine strength and want a larger device; otherwise a smaller, simpler disposable is the easier start.
About the Author: Chris Miller