The VOOPOO V.SUIT 40W Pod Kit is a compact, refillable pod system built around the PnP coil platform, aiming for a comfortable medium MTL draw with adjustable power and a pocket-friendly form factor in the mid-$30 price tier. It’s strongest on consistent flavor and low-fuss daily use, but it’s less ideal if you demand airflow control, larger liquid capacity, or big DL-style output.
Product Overview
| Device | Overall Score | Pros | Cons | Ideal For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| VOOPOO V.SUIT 40W Pod Kit | 4.2/5 | Clean MTL flavor, broad PnP compatibility, strong leak control | No airflow control, 2 mL pod, pen-style grip can feel slick | Adult MTL users who want adjustable wattage without going bulky |
Final Verdict
The V.SUIT is a practical MTL-first pod kit with a surprisingly “set-and-forget” feel once you find your wattage. The included PnP coils deliver reliable flavor at moderate warmth, the screen is genuinely useful, and the PnP ecosystem gives you flexibility. The trade-offs are real: no airflow adjustment, a 2 mL pod that needs frequent refills, and it’s not built for cloud-chasing.
Who It’s For
- Adult MTL users who like a medium draw
- People who want adjustable wattage without a full mod
- Anyone already using PnP coils/pods and wants cross-compatibility
Who It’s Not For
- Users who require airflow control
- Heavy DL users wanting large, dense vapor
- Anyone who hates frequent refills with 2 mL pods

Test Method
We ran the V.SUIT as an everyday carry for a full week, rotating the included 1.2Ω and 0.8Ω PnP coils through commute sessions, desk breaks, and evening stress testing. We scored Flavor, Throat Hit, Vapor Production, Airflow/Draw, Battery Life, Leak Resistance, Build Quality, Ease of Use, and Portability using repeatable settings and consistent refill habits. We also tracked condensation at the mouthpiece, checked for seepage after pocket carry, and compared performance after multiple recharge cycles.
Hands-On
Day one, I kept it simple: the 1.2Ω coil settled in around 12W on my unit (it read 1.19Ω), and the inhale felt like a medium-tight MTL—no whistling, no turbulence, just a steady pull that stays consistent puff to puff. The mouthpiece shape matters here: it sits naturally, and the vapor lands “rounded” in the mouth instead of sharp. By day three, Marcus pushed the 0.8Ω coil up to 17W (our coil read 0.82Ω) and called it a warm, controlled MTL that borders on loose MTL; flavor stayed accurate, but the battery dipped faster. Jamal’s feedback was pure real life: pocket carry, quick hits at crosswalks, and the device never felt fiddly—button, quick glance at the screen, done.
Across the week, I averaged about 6.5 hours of moderate use on the 1.2Ω coil and about 5.0 hours on the 0.8Ω coil, with a typical full recharge taking roughly 55 minutes in my routine. Condensation showed up as a light film at the mouthpiece after longer sessions, but I didn’t see true leaking.
What we liked
- Flavor stays steady in the 10–18W zone with the included coils
- Puff counter + clear screen makes daily tracking easy
- Pocket carry without seepage became the norm
Who it is best for
- Medium-draw MTL users who want adjustable warmth
- People who like the PnP ecosystem and want flexibility
- Commuters who value quick, predictable sessions
Where it falls short
- No airflow control means you live with the default draw
- 2 mL capacity forces frequent refills
- Not a true DL device, even at higher wattage

Pros and Cons
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| Reliable MTL flavor at moderate wattage | No airflow adjustment |
| PnP coil ecosystem offers flexibility | 2 mL pod refills often |
| Screen shows key data (including puff count) | Pen-style grip can feel less “locked-in” than boxier pods |
| Wide resistance support for PnP coils | Not built for big DL output |
| USB-C charging and simple controls | Mouthpiece can collect light condensation over time |
Specs
- Price: $35.99 (regular $40.99)
- Device type: refillable pod system (PnP platform)
- Output: 5–40W; resistance range 0.3–3.0Ω
- Battery: 1200 mAh internal; USB-C charging (our typical full charge ~55 minutes)
- Pod: 2 mL PnP MTL pod (PCTG)
- Display: 0.54-inch OLED (shows settings + puff count)
- Included coils: PnP-TR1 1.2Ω (10–15W), PnP-TM2 0.8Ω (12–18W)
- In the box: device, PnP MTL pod, two coils, Type-C cable, user manual

Scores
| Metric | Score | Remarks |
|---|---|---|
| Flavor | 4.3 | Accurate, steady flavor in the coils’ comfort range |
| Throat Hit | 4.1 | Controlled; easy to tune via wattage rather than airflow |
| Vapor Production | 3.9 | Solid for MTL, limited ceiling for DL-style volume |
| Airflow/Draw | 3.8 | Pleasant medium draw, but no adjustment hurts flexibility |
| Battery Life | 4.2 | 1200 mAh feels dependable for daily MTL use |
| Leak Resistance | 4.5 | Minimal seepage in pocket carry; mostly just light condensation |
| Build Quality | 4.0 | Light body feels durable enough, less premium than metal-heavy kits |
| Ease of Use | 4.4 | Straightforward controls, clear OLED, quick coil swaps |
| Portability | 4.6 | Easy carry, fast sessions, low “fuss factor” |
| Overall | 4.2 | Strong MTL daily driver with a few structural trade-offs |
Buying Guide
Choose the VOOPOO V.SUIT 40W Pod Kit if you want MTL with adjustable wattage, prefer a medium draw, and like the idea of swapping across the PnP coil range instead of being locked into one pod style. Skip it if airflow control is non-negotiable or you want larger capacity than 2 mL. Budget-wise, it makes sense when you prioritize coil variety and a simple screen-driven experience over “latest-gen” pod features.
If you want a modern, airflow-adjustable MTL/RDL pod platform with multiple output modes, consider the Vaporesso XROS 4.
If you want a slim pod system with larger pod capacity and a straightforward daily rhythm, the Uwell Caliburn G3 is a strong fit.
Limitations
The V.SUIT’s weaknesses are mostly structural rather than performance failures—it does what it’s designed to do, but it won’t stretch far outside that lane.
- No airflow control limits personalization
- 2 mL pod capacity means frequent refills
- MTL-first output; DL users will hit the ceiling fast
- Light body can feel less “anchored” in-hand than wider pod mods
Vs Alternatives
Why choose these models
- You want adjustable wattage in a compact, pen-like pod kit
- You value coil flexibility via the PnP ecosystem
- You prefer a simple screen and predictable MTL behavior
Alternatives to consider
- Vaporesso XROS 4: adjustable airflow + modern pod ecosystem for MTL/RDL versatility
- Uwell Caliburn G3: slim daily carry with a higher-capacity pod approach
- Geekvape Wenax Q: compact control-focused pod kit with a display-forward interface
Pro Tips
- Prime a new coil: fill the pod, then wait 3–5 minutes before your first session.
- Start low on wattage and climb in 1W steps until the warmth and flavor click.
- Treat the 1.2Ω coil as your “all-day MTL” option; use the 0.8Ω when you want more warmth.
- Wipe the mouthpiece daily if you notice light condensation buildup.
- Keep the pod seated cleanly—quickly wipe the contacts if you see moisture.
- Use pocket lock when carrying (so button presses don’t happen accidentally).
- Refill before the pod runs low to reduce the chance of dry, harsh hits.
- If flavor dulls, don’t immediately blame the device—swap the coil and re-check wattage.
- If you experiment with other PnP coils, stay within their recommended wattage bands.
FAQs
Is the V.SUIT better for MTL or DL?
It’s fundamentally an MTL device. You can loosen it slightly with coil choice and wattage, but it doesn’t behave like a true DL kit.
What wattage worked best in your testing?
On my unit, the 1.2Ω coil felt best around 11–13W for balanced flavor and comfortable warmth; the 0.8Ω coil landed around 15–18W for a warmer, denser MTL.
Does it leak?
In our carry testing, it resisted leaking well. I mostly saw light condensation at the mouthpiece after longer sessions, which is manageable with quick wipes.
Can I use other PnP coils and pods?
Yes. The device supports the PnP coil platform (0.3Ω and above), which opens up a lot of tuning options if you already use PnP gear.
About the Author: Chris Miller