The VOOPOO VRIZZ 2 Pod Kit is a refillable, disposable-style pod system built around a massive 15 mL pod and three power modes up to 30W, typically landing around $16.99–$19.99. It nails convenience and steady flavor for day-to-day nicotine use, but it’s bulkier than most pods and charges slower than I’d like. It fits adults who want big capacity with minimal fuss, not pocket-minimalists.
Product Overview
| Device | Overall Score | Pros | Cons | Ideal For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| VOOPOO VRIZZ 2 Pod Kit | 4.1/5 | Huge pod, stable modes, adjustable draw | Bulky filled, slower charging, flavor swapping is awkward | Adults who want disposable-like convenience in a refillable device |
Final Verdict
The VRIZZ 2 is a practical “set it and forget it” pod kit: big capacity, simple mode switching, and a draw you can tune from tighter MTL to a looser RDL. The trade-off is physical: it feels chunky once the pod is filled, and the ~1.2A USB-C charging pace isn’t fast for 2025-era hardware.
- Who It’s For
- Adults who burn through liquid and hate refilling
- MTL/RDL users who want quick, repeatable performance
- People replacing disposables but keeping the same “grab-and-go” vibe
- Who It’s Not For
- Anyone who wants a truly slim pocket pod
- Flavor hoppers who swap liquids constantly
- Users who demand fast charging above everything

How We Tested It
We ran the VRIZZ 2 across commutes, desk breaks, errands, and late-night sessions, rotating ECO/NORM/TURBO while scoring Flavor, Throat Hit, Vapor Production, Airflow/Draw, Battery Life, Leak Resistance, Build Quality, Ease of Use, and Portability. We tracked charge time by stopwatch, noted condensation and seepage after pocket carry, and compared draw feel at multiple airflow positions. Nicotine products are for adults only; use isn’t recommended for minors, pregnant people, or people who don’t use nicotine, and all experience notes are subjective—not medical advice.
Our Testing Experience
The first thing I noticed is how “disposable-like” the whole cadence feels—pick a mode, set airflow, and it just keeps going—but the pod is the main event: 15 mL changes your routine because refills stop being a daily chore. I spent most of my time in NORM (22W) because it hit the best balance of smoothness and saturation, then bumped to TURBO (30W) when I wanted a louder, denser pull.
Marcus (our high-intensity tester) predictably lived in TURBO and pushed long, repeated pulls; the device warmed a bit around the body but didn’t develop scary hot spots, and the dual-mesh pod stayed consistent longer than I expected before the flavor started to flatten. Jamal pocket-carried it all week—walking, commuting, tossing it into a bag—then kept an eye on seepage around the bottom-fill plug. We saw light condensation in the mouthpiece area (normal for this style), but no true leaking that soaked a pocket.
On charging, I timed a full run from low battery to “full” at about 1 hour 17 minutes with USB-C—close to what I’d expect at ~1.2A, but still not “quick top-up” territory.
- What we liked
- Consistent flavor across modes, especially NORM
- Huge capacity changes day-to-day convenience
- Draw adjustment is meaningful, not cosmetic
- Who it is best for
- Adults trying to replace disposables with refillable gear
- Commuters who want fewer refills and fewer settings
- Users who alternate MTL and restricted DTL day to day
- Where it falls short
- Size/weight jumps noticeably when the pod is full
- Charging speed feels dated
- One big pod makes frequent flavor switching annoying

Pros & Cons
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| Massive 15 mL pod reduces refills | Bulky once filled |
| Three practical power modes | Slower ~1.2A charging |
| Adjustable airflow supports MTL to RDL | Not ideal for frequent flavor changes |
| Dual-mesh pod keeps output steady | Condensation needs basic wipe-down |
| Simple interface and readable display | Large pod is slower to fill/empty |
| Solid chassis feel | Pocket comfort varies by clothing |
Details
- Price: $16.99–$19.99
- Device type: refillable pod system (disposable-style form factor)
- Battery: 1350 mAh (internal)
- Output: up to 30W; modes: ECO 15W / NORM 22W / TURBO 30W
- Pod: 15 mL; bottom-fill
- Pod/coil: VRIZZ Cartridge V2 dual mesh; operates as 0.7Ω in ECO and 0.4Ω in NORM/TURBO
- Charging: USB-C; rated ~1.2A; observed full charge ~1 hour 17 minutes
- Size: about 101.3 × 50.2 × 25.4 mm

Review Score
| Metric | Score | Remarks |
|---|---|---|
| Flavor | 4.3 | NORM is especially consistent with a clean, saturated pull |
| Throat Hit | 4.1 | Predictable across modes; TURBO adds bite without harshness |
| Vapor Production | 4.2 | TURBO produces dense, satisfying output for a pod system |
| Airflow/Draw | 4.1 | Adjustability is noticeable; easy to find a “daily” setting |
| Battery Life | 4.0 | Strong day-to-day runtime, but modes and habits matter |
| Leak Resistance | 4.2 | No true pocket-soaking leaks; normal condensation remains |
| Build Quality | 4.3 | Chassis feels solid; fit and finish hold up to daily carry |
| Ease of Use | 4.1 | Mode switching is simple; filling is straightforward but slow-ish |
| Portability | 3.6 | Pocketable, but the full pod makes it feel chunky |
| Overall | 4.1 | Big-capacity convenience with a few practical compromises |
How to Choose the VOOPOO VRIZZ 2 Pod Kit?
Pick it if you want a refillable device that behaves like a disposable: minimal decisions, big capacity, and a draw you can tune between MTL and RDL. Prioritize it when refilling frequency is your pain point; skip it if pocket comfort and fast charging are non-negotiable. If you want a slimmer daily MTL with strong flavor and broader pod availability, consider Vaporesso XROS 4. If you want a compact, mainstream pod with a more traditional footprint and simple pods, look at Uwell Caliburn G3.
Limitations
The VRIZZ 2 is deliberately built around capacity, and everything else bends around that choice.
- Bulk/weight becomes noticeable when the pod is full
- Charging pace is merely adequate, not fast
- Large pod format discourages frequent flavor switching
VOOPOO VRIZZ 2 Vs. Alternatives
- Why choose these models
- VRIZZ 2: huge capacity + simple modes for disposable-style routine
- XROS 4: compact, flavor-forward MTL pod ecosystem
- Caliburn G3: straightforward, portable, mainstream pod option
- Alternatives to consider
- Vaporesso XROS 4: better pocket comfort; strong MTL focus
- Uwell Caliburn G3: simpler carry profile; dependable daily pod
- Geekvape Wenax Q Pro: feature-rich interface with up to 30W
Pro Tips for VOOPOO VRIZZ 2 Pod Kit
- Fill slowly and pause once or twice during a full fill to reduce air bubbles.
- After filling, give it a few minutes before heavy use so the pod wicks evenly.
- Start in ECO for a new pod, then step up to NORM/TURBO once it’s settled.
- Keep airflow slightly tighter than you think; it often improves flavor density.
- Wipe the mouthpiece area daily to keep condensation from building up.
- If you pocket-carry, keep it upright when possible—bottom-fill pods behave best that way.
- Use TURBO in short bursts; it’s the fastest way to heat the device and mute flavor over time.
- Don’t chase “dry” performance—refill earlier than you would on a small pod to keep the coil happy.
- Treat one pod as “one flavor lane” to avoid muddy mixes in a 15 mL reservoir.
FAQs
Does the VRIZZ 2 feel more like MTL or RDL?
With airflow tightened, it can run a tighter MTL-style pull; opened up, it leans into a restricted direct-lung draw that feels closer to boosted disposables.
Is the 15 mL pod actually practical day to day?
Yes if you value fewer refills. The downside is commitment: once it’s filled, swapping flavors is inconvenient because you’re moving a lot of liquid.
How’s charging in real use?
Expect roughly around the 1 hour 20 minute neighborhood for a full charge, depending on your power source; it’s functional, not fast.
Does it leak in a pocket or bag?
In our carry testing it didn’t produce pocket-soaking leaks, but you should expect routine mouthpiece condensation and occasional wipe-down.
Which mode is best for daily use?
NORM is the easiest “default” for balanced flavor and warmth, while ECO stretches battery and TURBO is best used selectively for heavier hits.
About the Author: Chris Miller