Hyppe Vape Reviews: Hyppe Bar 300, Hyppe Plus 400, Hyppe Ultra & More

Hyppe sits in a strange middle space. The brand has tiny “grab one” sticks. It also has bigger disposables with recharge. Then, it jumps to ultra high puff devices with screens.

I wanted a clean, side-by-side set of Hyppe Vape reviews. I also wanted to see whether the “feel” stays consistent. That includes draw weight, condensation behavior, and flavor style.

I tested the lineup with Marcus Reed and Jamal Davis. Dr. Adrian Walker reviewed the risk language and labeling tone. All notes stay framed for adult nicotine users only.

Product Overview

Device Pros Cons Ideal For Price Overall Score
Hyppe Bar 300 Simple draw, small carry, fast flavor pop Short lifespan, fixed airflow, limited power Quick errands, backup device 510 3.3
Hyppe Plus 400 Low-strength option, light throat feel, compact Thin vapor, short runtime, simple coil feel Light users who want 2% 510 3.4
Hyppe Ultra 600 Smoother than Bar, steadier battery, easy MTL Still small capacity, fixed airflow Pocket MTL, short sessions 712 3.6
Hyppe Max 1500 Noticeably longer use, bigger battery feel, stable draw Fixed airflow, bulkier, can taste “flat” late All-day casual use 1220 3.9
Hyppe Max Flow 2000 Adjustable airflow ring, wide flavor catalog, strong MTL Retail specs vary, can run warm in long pulls MTL users who want control 915 4.1
Hyppe Max Air 5000 Rechargeable, long run time, good coil consistency Bigger body, flavors vary by batch Heavy daily carry 1218 4.2
Hyppe Max Pod Power Unit Kit Keep battery, swap pods, very simple routine Flavor range is narrow, pod cost adds up Menthol or tobacco users 1525 4.0
Hyppe Infiniti 50K Two modes, screen feedback, long endurance Large device, sweet profiles dominate Heavy users who hate replacements 1525 4.4

Testing Team Takeaways

I kept coming back to draw behavior. On the small sticks, the pull starts fast, then fades. On the mid sizes, the pull stays steadier. The big devices lean sweeter, with louder cooling options.

Marcus pushed the coil limits. He ran longer pulls, then repeated them. He kept watching heat at the shell. He also tracked when sweetness turned “candied.” He said, “The little ones feel fine, then they thin out fast.” He also said, “On the bigger Hyppe stuff, the coil stays steadier.”

Jamal lived with the devices in pockets, bags, and car cup holders. He watched mouthpiece comfort and lint risk. He also cared about accidental gurgle. He said, “If it rolls around all day, I want it to stay dry.” He also said, “The pod kit is boring, yet it behaves.”

Dr. Adrian Walker kept the language grounded. He focused on nicotine risk framing. He also flagged any “safe vapor” style phrasing. WHO notes that e-cigarettes can contain harmful chemicals, with nicotine often present, and it also emphasizes youth protection.

Hyppe Vapes Comparison Chart

Spec Hyppe Bar 300 Hyppe Plus 400 Hyppe Ultra 600 Hyppe Max 1500 Hyppe Max Flow 2000 Hyppe Max Air 5000 Hyppe Max Pod Power Unit Hyppe Infiniti 50K
Device type Disposable Disposable Disposable Disposable Disposable Rechargeable disposable Power unit + pods Rechargeable disposable
Nicotine range Often 5% 2% 5% 5% 3.5% and 5% 5% 5% pods 5%
Activation Draw Draw Draw Draw Draw Draw Draw Draw
Battery 280mAh 280mAh 450–500mAh 650mAh ~900mAh 650mAh rechargeable 400mAh rechargeable 920mAh rechargeable
E-liquid 1.3mL 1.6mL 2mL 5mL 6mL 13mL Pods vary 12mL
Coil Standard Standard Standard Mesh listings exist Mesh Mesh Pod coil Mesh style listings
Airflow Fixed Fixed Fixed Fixed Bottom ring Open MTL to RDL feel Fixed pod draw Modes + tuning features
Flavor style Bright, quick Light, simple Cleaner, steadier Fuller midrange Wide catalog Fuller, longer Menthol/tobacco focused Loud, sweet, long
Leak risk Low, short life Low Low Medium late-life Medium if abused Medium late-life Low Medium, large reservoir
Build feel Tiny stick Tiny stick Slightly sturdier Larger stick Cylindrical Flat body + lanyard Compact unit Large body + screen

What We Tested and How We Tested It

We scored each device with the same daily-use grid. Flavor accuracy came first. I compared the inhale taste to the label. I also watched sweetness creep over time. I logged aftertaste length.

Throat hit stayed subjective. We treated it as feel, not health impact. I wrote notes after short pulls. Marcus wrote notes after longer pulls. Jamal wrote notes between commutes.

Vapor production got judged in normal rooms. No “cloud contest” setup. Marcus still pushed output by chaining pulls. He also watched heat at the shell and mouthpiece.

Airflow and draw smoothness mattered a lot here. I measured how quickly the device ramps. I also tracked whistle, turbulence, and sputter. Jamal cared about draw comfort while walking.

Battery life and charging behavior used normal habits. On recharge models, I watched charge stability. I also checked shell warmth during charging. Dr. Walker’s view stayed the same. Nicotine is addictive, and products should stay away from minors and non-users.

Leak and condensation control used pocket tests. Jamal carried devices all day. He checked mouthpiece dampness. He also checked whether the draw turned “wet.”

Build quality included drop scuffs and port wobble. Reliability covered misfires and weak hits late in life. Every observation stayed usage-based. None of it replaces medical care.

Hyppe Vapes Our Testing Experience

Hyppe Bar 300

Our Testing Experience

I treated the Hyppe Bar as the baseline. It’s the tiny stick you buy, then forget. I used it during short breaks. I kept it as a “two hours in a pocket” test. Jamal did the same, then tossed it in a gym bag. He kept checking lint at the mouthpiece.

The hit starts quick. The first pull has that sharp, candy-bright edge. It feels like a fast ramp, then a quick settle. Under that kind of usage, the Bar behaves. It does not leak much. It also does not gurgle early.

Marcus ran it harder. He took longer pulls and repeated them. The device did what small disposables do. It thins out. The flavor also flattens sooner. He said, “It’s fine for a quick craving.” He then added, “I wouldn’t rely on it all day.”

I noticed the same thing. Late life, the pull feels airy. The sweetness turns “dry.” Jamal also caught that “end stage” feel. He said, “It still works, yet it doesn’t feel worth the effort.”

Dr. Walker focused on labeling clarity. On this size, warnings often sit tiny. He wanted clear adult-only positioning and no “safe” language.

Draw Experience and Flavors

The draw is a tight MTL by default. It has a cigarette-like resistance. The airflow is fixed. I could still change the feel by how I sipped it. Short pulls feel cleaner. Long pulls can feel warm.

Apple Ice felt crisp at first pull. The apple reads like green peel. The cooling sits behind it. On the inhale, the flavor lands fast, then exits fast. The throat feel stays light, yet present. Jamal liked it during walking sessions. He said, “It tastes like it knows what it is.”

Cola Ice leaned candy. The cola note is syrupy. The cooling hits mid-draw. It gives a fizzy illusion at the end of the exhale. Marcus said, “It’s fun, then it gets sticky.” He was right. By later pulls, the cola gets heavier.

Blue Razz hit hard on sweetness. The inhale feels loud. The exhale carries a tart edge. It also leaves a bright aftertaste. I liked it in short bursts. It wore me down in long sessions.

Grape Soda feels rounder than Blue Razz. The grape is “purple candy.” It has a fizzy note. The throat feel stays smooth. Jamal called it “car drink vibes.” That line stuck with me.

Icy Mint is the cleanest draw. The mint reads simple. Cooling is stronger than the fruit profiles. It also clears the palate. Marcus used it after heavy testing. He said, “This resets my tongue.”

Lush Ice mixes watermelon candy with cooling. The inhale reads sweet. The exhale reads colder. The device does not layer it much. It stays straightforward.

Best draw experience from this set came from Apple Ice. I also liked Icy Mint as a palate reset.

Pros and Cons

Pros Cons
Fast ramp on draw Short lifespan
Pocket friendly size Fixed airflow
Little leak risk early Flavor fades late
Simple to use Thin vapor for heavy users
Wide flavor list on the market Sweet profiles can get tiring

Key Specs and Flavors

  • Price: often 510
  • Device type: disposable stick
  • Nicotine strength options: commonly 5% (varies by market)
  • Activation method: draw-activated
  • Battery capacity: 280mAh
  • Charging port and charge time: none, non-rechargeable
  • Coil type: basic disposable coil
  • E-liquid capacity: 1.3mL
  • Airflow style: fixed
  • Vapor production: low to mid
  • Leak resistance features: sealed disposable design
  • Build materials: plastic shell
  • Dimensions and weight: very light stick format
  • Safety features: basic short-circuit style protections vary by batch
  • Flavors seen across listings: Apple Ice, Blue Razz, Blueberry Ice, Cola Ice, Cool Melon, Frozen Banana, Frozen Mango, Grape Soda, Guava Ice, Icy Mint, Lemon Ice, Lemon Soda, Lush Ice, Lychee Ice, Lychee Soda, Mango Lychee, Menthol, Orange Soda, Peach Ice, Peach Soda, Pear Ice

Review Score

Metric Score Remarks
Flavor 3.4 Bright at first, then fades fast.
Throat Hit 3.3 Light punch, can feel sharp late.
Vapor Production 3.1 Small device output, stays modest.
Airflow Draw 3.5 Tight MTL feel, smooth early pulls.
Battery Life 3.0 Short runtime in real carry.
Leak Resistance 3.8 Rare gurgle early, stays dry.
Build Quality 3.2 Simple shell, fine for the price.
Ease of Use 4.7 No setup, no settings, no learning.
Portability 4.8 Tiny size fits any pocket.
Overall 3.3 Great backup, not a main device.

Hyppe Plus 400

Our Testing Experience

The Plus sits in a different lane. It often shows up as a 2% device. That changes the feel right away. The throat sensation comes softer. The “nicotine edge” drops. I used it as a calmer, desk-side option.

Jamal liked the concept. He could grab it without bracing for a strong hit. He used it between errands. He also used it while waiting in lines. He said, “It’s low drama.” That matches the whole product.

Marcus struggled to enjoy it. He is used to stronger delivery. He took longer pulls to compensate. That pushed the device into a thin, wispy output. He said, “I can’t make it feel like enough.” The device still behaved. It just did not match his style.

I noticed the coil feels simpler. The flavor stays clear enough early. Late life, the sweetness takes on a “paper” tone. That happens with small tanks. It also happens when you chase it.

Dr. Walker liked the fact that strength labeling tends to be clearer here. He still wanted the same adult-only framing. He also wanted no “starter for teens” tone.

Draw Experience and Flavors

The draw feels tight. It leans MTL. It also feels slightly softer on the throat. That lower-strength setup changes the whole experience. The flavors can taste “lighter.” They also feel less sticky.

Mango Ice is the cleanest profile I tried on Plus. The inhale has a ripe mango note. It tastes more like juice than candy. The cooling comes late. It feels like a small breeze at the end. Jamal said, “This is the one I can keep using.”

Cola Ice reads sweeter on this device. It also reads flatter. The fizzy illusion is weaker. The throat feel stays mild. I could chain short pulls without that harsh edge. That surprised me.

Mint feels straightforward. It is not a complex spearmint. It is more like a cooling leaf note. It clears the palate. Marcus still found it weak. He said, “I want it to bite more.”

Tobacco style flavors on Plus tend to feel thin. The sweetness shows up early. The “dry leaf” note feels light. Jamal still liked it for short sessions. He said, “It doesn’t linger.” That can be a plus.

Blueberry Ice comes off candy-like. On inhale, it tastes like blueberry syrup. Cooling carries it out. Late in the device life, it can taste perfumey. I kept pulls short to avoid that.

Strawberry profiles taste like strawberry candy. They can feel pleasant, yet simple. The mouthfeel stays smooth. The vapor feels small.

Best draw experience here came from Mango Ice. Mint also works when you want a clean exit.

Pros and Cons

Pros Cons
Softer throat feel at 2% Light vapor output
Very easy pocket carry Short life
Good for short, calm sessions Limited “kick” for heavy users
Low-maintenance disposable Flavor can feel thin
Often affordable Fixed airflow

Key Specs and Flavors

  • Price: often 510
  • Device type: disposable
  • Nicotine strength options: 2%
  • Activation method: draw-activated
  • Battery capacity: 280mAh
  • Charging port and charge time: none
  • Coil type and resistance: 1.6Ω listing on some specs
  • E-liquid capacity: 1.6mL
  • Airflow style: fixed
  • Build materials: rubber paint finish listed on some specs
  • Flavors vary by market. Common mentions include Cola Ice, Mint, Tobacco, Mango Ice.

Review Score

Metric Score Remarks
Flavor 3.3 Clear early, light intensity overall.
Throat Hit 3.2 Mild feel, little edge for heavy users.
Vapor Production 3.0 Thin output, especially on long pulls.
Airflow Draw 3.5 Tight MTL pull, smooth ramp.
Battery Life 3.2 Short-to-mid, depends on pacing.
Leak Resistance 3.8 Sealed body stays dry in pockets.
Build Quality 3.3 Basic shell, decent finish feel.
Ease of Use 4.7 Grab and draw, nothing else.
Portability 4.6 Very light stick shape.
Overall 3.4 Best for light, simple use.

Hyppe Ultra 600

Our Testing Experience

Ultra feels like Hyppe tightening the basics. It is still small. It still runs fixed airflow. The hit feels steadier than Bar. The mouthpiece also tends to feel more comfortable in longer use.

I carried Ultra during commute breaks. It stayed in the same pocket as keys. Jamal did the heavier carry test. He moved it between pants pockets and jacket pockets. He also kept checking mouthpiece dampness. He said, “This one stays cleaner.” That matched my notes.

Marcus treated Ultra as a “small device stress check.” He chained pulls. He also watched heat. The device warmed a bit, then leveled. The flavor still faded late, yet it stayed more stable than Bar.

The biggest thing I noticed was consistency. The first pull and the tenth pull feel similar. With Bar, you feel a faster falloff. With Ultra, you get a longer middle phase.

Dr. Walker pushed one point here. These small disposables can feel “easy,” and that can drive frequent use. He wanted the language to stay neutral. He also wanted adult-only positioning to stay explicit.

Draw Experience and Flavors

The draw is classic MTL. It is smooth. It does not whistle much. The throat feel is medium for a small device. Cooling flavors can still sting if you chain them.

Banana Ice tastes like banana candy, then cooling. The inhale is sweet. The exhale is colder. The banana note sits mid-palate. It also lingers. Jamal said, “It’s dessert, but not heavy.” I agreed.

Cola Ice tastes cleaner than the Bar version. The cola syrup note still exists. It just feels less sticky. The cooling arrives late. I got a slight citrus edge on the exhale. That helped.

Grape Soda tastes like a purple soda float. It has a round mouthfeel. It also has a soft sweetness. Marcus still called it “too friendly.” He wanted more bite.

Lemon Soda tastes bright. It hits like lemon candy. It also has a fizzy feeling in the back of the throat. That “fizz” is just flavor shaping, yet it feels convincing. I liked it in short pulls.

Lush Ice leans watermelon candy. Cooling sits strong. On Ultra, it stays smoother than Bar. The mouthfeel still turns a little dry late life.

Mighty Mint tastes clean. Cooling is strong. It feels like a reset. Marcus used it between fruit tests. He said, “This keeps my palate honest.”

Orange Soda is sweet citrus. It tastes like orange candy. It also has a soft soda note. Jamal liked it for quick sessions.

Best draw experience came from Lemon Soda. Mighty Mint also stayed reliable when my palate got tired.

Pros and Cons

Pros Cons
More consistent than Bar Still small capacity
Comfortable MTL pull Fixed airflow
Usually stays dry in pockets Flavor fades late life
Easy for short sessions Not for high-output users
Decent flavor clarity Limited customization

Key Specs and Flavors

  • Price: often 712
  • Device type: disposable
  • Nicotine strength options: commonly 5%
  • Activation method: draw-activated
  • Battery capacity: 450mAh listings exist, some retailers list 500mAh
  • Charging port: none
  • E-liquid capacity: 2mL
  • Puff range: around 600
  • Airflow style: fixed
  • Flavors: Banana Ice, Cola Ice, Grape Soda, Lemon Soda, Lush Ice, Lychee Soda, Mighty Mint, Orange Soda, Peach Ice, Strawberry Banana

Review Score

Metric Score Remarks
Flavor 3.7 Cleaner than Bar, still simple layering.
Throat Hit 3.5 Smooth MTL feel, cooling can sting.
Vapor Production 3.3 Modest clouds, steady for its size.
Airflow Draw 3.8 Smooth pull, low whistle, good ramp.
Battery Life 3.4 Longer middle phase than Bar.
Leak Resistance 3.9 Pocket carry stayed mostly dry.
Build Quality 3.4 Slightly sturdier feel than Bar.
Ease of Use 4.7 Draw and go, no setup.
Portability 4.4 Small, still easy carry.
Overall 3.6 A better “tiny Hyppe” option.

Hyppe Max 1500

Our Testing Experience

Max 1500 is where Hyppe starts feeling like a daily tool. The tank is bigger. The battery feel is bigger. The device also feels less like a novelty stick.

I used Max 1500 as my default car device for a week. It sat in a cup holder. It also got jostled around. Jamal carried it through errands. He kept checking the mouthpiece for moisture. He also checked whether it rolled around. He said, “This is still pocketable.” He then added, “It’s not invisible.”

Marcus used Max 1500 as a “chain pull” device. He wanted to see if it would get hot. It warmed slightly. It did not spike. The flavor held longer than the smaller Hyppe devices. Late life, it still flattened, yet it gave a longer good phase.

The fixed airflow is the main limitation. You take the draw it gives you. I got used to it. Marcus wanted more openness. Jamal liked the predictability.

Dr. Walker focused on warning text. Several listings describe this as 5% salt nicotine. That is strong for many users. He wanted the copy to avoid glamor. He also wanted adult-only framing to stay clear.

Draw Experience and Flavors

The draw feels like a firm MTL. It is not overly tight. It also has a steadier airflow than the Bar line. The inhale feels fuller. The exhale feels warmer.

Lychee Soda tastes floral. It has a sweet lychee core. It also has a soft soda note. The throat feel stays smooth. Jamal said, “This tastes like a drink.” He liked it for short breaks.

Cola Ice tastes stronger here than on Ultra. The syrup note sits deeper. Cooling hits late. The exhale has a slight spice note. Marcus said, “It’s closer to the real thing.” He still got tired of it after long sessions.

Lemon Soda tastes bright and sharp. The inhale feels like lemon candy. The exhale feels fizzy. It also has a clean finish. I liked it when my palate felt heavy.

Mighty Mint is a workhorse flavor. Cooling is clean. It also stays consistent. I used it between fruit tests. It kept my mouth feeling “reset.”

Orange Soda tastes like orange candy. It has a sweet citrus feel. The soda note sits behind it. It can feel sticky late life. Short pulls keep it cleaner.

Strawberry Banana feels creamy. Strawberry hits first. Banana follows. The blend feels smoother here than on Ultra. Marcus still said, “It’s a dessert vape.” He meant it as a warning.

Best draw experience came from Lemon Soda. Mighty Mint stayed the most consistent.

Pros and Cons

Pros Cons
Longer life than small sticks Fixed airflow
Fuller vapor Can feel bulky
Battery feels steadier Flavor can flatten late
Stable ramp on draw Sweet flavors can linger
Good “daily casual” option Not for DL style

Key Specs and Flavors

  • Price: often 1220
  • Device type: disposable
  • Nicotine strength options: commonly 5% salt
  • Activation method: draw-activated
  • Battery capacity: 650mAh
  • Recharge: typically non-rechargeable
  • E-liquid capacity: 5mL
  • Puff range: up to 1500
  • Airflow: fixed
  • Flavors seen on listings: Apple Blackcurrant, Apple Grape Blackcurrant, Lychee Guava, Lychee Soda, Cola Ice, Lemon Soda

Review Score

Metric Score Remarks
Flavor 3.9 Fuller than Ultra, stays steady longer.
Throat Hit 3.8 Firm feel, less sharp than Bar.
Vapor Production 3.8 Denser vapor, still MTL focused.
Airflow Draw 3.7 Smooth pull, no tuning options.
Battery Life 4.1 Longer usable middle phase.
Leak Resistance 3.8 Mostly dry, late-life moisture possible.
Build Quality 3.7 Solid stick body, decent mouthpiece.
Ease of Use 4.6 Simple disposable routine.
Portability 3.8 Pocketable, yet not tiny.
Overall 3.9 A practical step up.

Hyppe Max Flow 2000

Our Testing Experience

Max Flow is the first Hyppe device here that lets you tune airflow. That matters. It changes how the throat hit lands. It also changes how flavor blooms. I treated it like a “settings” disposable.

I ran Max Flow across a week. I used tighter airflow during work. I opened it up at night. Jamal loved the ring. He could tighten it for walking. He said, “This stops the windy pull.” That’s a real problem outside.

Marcus pushed it with longer pulls. He wanted to see if it would run hot. The shell warmed a bit, then stabilized. He said, “It holds together better than most 2K sticks.” He still noted that sweetness can build up.

Specs across retailers can conflict on recharge. Some listings frame it as a toss-when-done device. Others call it rechargeable. In day use, I treated it as disposable first. I also checked packaging details when available.

Dr. Walker’s main point here was labeling clarity. Nic strength can vary by version. Some listings show 3.5% options. Some show 5%. He wanted readers to confirm the box.

Draw Experience and Flavors

The draw can shift from tight MTL to a looser restricted pull. The airflow ring makes it possible. That changes flavor texture. Tight draw gives a denser mouthfeel. Open draw gives a brighter top note.

Aloe Grape tastes like cool grape juice with a soft aloe finish. On tight airflow, the grape feels round. On open airflow, the aloe edge shows more. I liked it tighter. Jamal said, “This feels smoother when it’s tighter.”

Banana Freeze hits sweet, then cold. The banana reads candy. Cooling is strong. Marcus opened airflow to reduce throat pressure. He said, “Open helps this not feel sticky.” He was right.

Chewy Watermelon tastes like watermelon candy. It also has a taffy note on some versions. Tight airflow makes it feel thicker. Open airflow makes it feel fresher. I liked it mid-open.

Cola Freeze tastes sharp and fizzy. The cooling comes faster than the Cola Ice profiles. It also feels brighter. I got a slight spice note on exhale. Marcus liked it in short pulls. He said, “This one stays lively.”

Cucumber Berry is the weird one. It tastes fresh. The cucumber note is real. Berry sits behind it. Tight airflow can make it taste perfumey. Open airflow makes it feel cleaner. Jamal liked it outdoors. He said, “It feels like a cold drink.”

Peach Freeze tastes like ripe peach candy. Cooling sits late. The throat feel stays smooth at mid airflow. Tight airflow can make it heavy. Open airflow can make it thin.

Best draw experience came from Aloe Grape with tighter airflow. Cola Freeze also stayed exciting without getting muddy.

Pros and Cons

Pros Cons
Airflow ring adds control Retail specs vary by version
Very wide flavor menu Can run warm on long chains
Good consistency for 2K class Sweetness can build up
Strong MTL performance Some flavors feel candy-heavy
Easy for commuters Larger than tiny sticks

Key Specs and Flavors

  • Price: often 915
  • Device type: disposable
  • Nicotine strength options: many listings show 3.5% and some 5%
  • Activation method: draw-activated
  • Battery: commonly listed around 900mAh
  • E-liquid capacity: 6mL
  • Puff range: about 2000
  • Coil: mesh listings are common
  • Airflow: bottom control ring
  • Charging: varies by listing, check the box
  • Flavor list seen on major menus: Aloe Grape, Aloe Orange, Banana Freeze, Chewy Watermelon, Cola Freeze, Cucumber Berry, Glacial Mint, Kiwi Strawberry, Lush Freeze, Mighty Mint, Naked, New Menthol, Peach Freeze, Raspberry Watermelon, Strawberry Banana, Strawberry Sky, Tobacco Chill, Tobacco Dream, Tribacco, Virginia Tobacco

Review Score

Metric Score Remarks
Flavor 4.2 Strong catalog, good intensity on tight draw.
Throat Hit 4.0 Tuned by airflow, cooling can bite.
Vapor Production 3.9 Dense for MTL, not a cloud device.
Airflow Draw 4.4 Ring makes real differences in feel.
Battery Life 4.0 Reliable in normal daily pacing.
Leak Resistance 3.8 Mostly dry, condensation possible late.
Build Quality 3.9 Solid cylinder, ring feels usable.
Ease of Use 4.3 Still simple, plus one control.
Portability 3.6 Pocketable, yet thicker body.
Overall 4.1 Best mid-tier Hyppe daily option.

Hyppe Max Air 5000

Our Testing Experience

Max Air is the Hyppe device I kept reaching for. The flat body carries well. The lanyard option also changes the carry style. Recharge makes it feel less wasteful during the run. A major review and multiple listings describe 13mL liquid, mesh coil, and a 650mAh rechargeable battery with USB-C.

I used Max Air as the “all day” device. I carried it through errands. I kept it at my desk. I also used it during late testing sessions. The device stayed consistent longer than the 2K class.

Marcus did the stress test. He ran longer pulls with short breaks. He watched shell warmth. He said, “This holds a steady hit longer.” He also said, “It feels like the coil is doing real work.” He was reacting to the stable output.

Jamal cared about pocket behavior. The flat body sits better than cylinders. It also does not roll around. He said, “This stays where I put it.” He still found late-life mouthpiece moisture. That came after heavy use.

I also noticed flavor variation by batch. Some flavors pop. Some feel muted. A long-form review even praised the device while still calling flavor strength inconsistent on some profiles.

Dr. Walker focused on safety language. One listing mentions a circuit breaker safety switch. He treated that as a feature, not a promise.

Draw Experience and Flavors

The draw can sit between MTL and restricted lung, depending on how you pull. The airflow feels more open than tiny Hyppe sticks. The hit feels steady. The throat feel stays medium to strong, depending on flavor.

Caramel Ice Cream surprised me. The inhale tastes like caramel topping. The cream note sits behind it. Cooling is subtle. The mouthfeel feels thick. Marcus said, “This one is legit.” That mirrors a well-known review that singled it out.

Cola Freeze tastes bright and sharp. The cooling hits earlier than Cola Ice. The exhale tastes fizzy. It can feel harsh if you chain it. I took shorter pulls and it stayed fun.

Mango Freeze tastes like mango candy, then cooling. It has a bright top note. It also leaves a sweet film on the tongue. Jamal liked it at first. He then said, “It gets tiring after a while.” That was after a long day.

Mighty Mint is the most consistent. Cooling is clean. The inhale tastes like mint leaf. The exhale stays cold. It also clears the palate. Marcus used it after sweet tests. He said, “This is the reset button.”

Sour Peach tastes sharp. The sour note hits the sides of the tongue. Peach follows. Cooling sits behind it. The throat feel can sting on long pulls. I kept it for shorter sessions.

Strawberry Sky tastes like strawberry candy with a soft airy note. It is sweet. It also feels less icy. Late in the device life, it can taste thinner.

Best draw experience came from Caramel Ice Cream. Mighty Mint stayed the safest “all day” choice.

Pros and Cons

Pros Cons
Rechargeable long-run device Bigger body than 2K class
Stable hit over more of its life Some flavors feel muted
Flat shape carries well Late-life condensation happens
Mesh coil feel is consistent Sweet profiles can fatigue
Lanyard option adds carry styles Not a discreet tiny stick

Key Specs and Flavors

  • Price: often listed around $15.99 on major reviews and stores
  • Device type: rechargeable disposable
  • Nicotine strength: commonly 5% salt
  • Activation method: draw-activated
  • Battery: 650mAh rechargeable, USB-C
  • E-liquid capacity: 13mL
  • Puff range: around 5000
  • Coil: mesh
  • Notable feature: lanyard, circuit breaker safety switch listed on some packs
  • Flavor list from a major review: Black Sakura, Caramel Ice Cream, Cola Freeze, Lush Freeze, Mango Freeze, Mighty Mint, Naked, Sour Peach, Peach Freeze, Strawberry Freeze, Strawberry Sky, Summer Fruit, Berry Lemon Ice, Strawberry Mango

Review Score

Metric Score Remarks
Flavor 4.1 Strong highs, some profiles less intense.
Throat Hit 4.2 Firm feel, cooling flavors can bite.
Vapor Production 4.1 Dense for a disposable, steady output.
Airflow Draw 4.0 Slightly open, smooth ramp, low whistle.
Battery Life 4.5 Recharge extends real daily usefulness.
Leak Resistance 3.7 Mostly clean, late-life moisture appears.
Build Quality 4.2 Flat body feels solid, port feels stable.
Ease of Use 4.4 Simple use, plus recharge routine.
Portability 3.9 Flat carry helps, size is larger.
Overall 4.2 The best “classic Hyppe” experience.

Hyppe Max Pod Power Unit Kit

Our Testing Experience

This one changes the routine. You keep the battery. You replace pods. That simple shift makes daily life easier. It also reduces the “toss the whole thing” feel. Listings describe a 400mAh rechargeable power unit with USB-C.

I treated it like a commuter device. I used it before driving. I used it after walking. Jamal loved it for pockets. The shape sits stable. It also does not roll. He said, “This feels like something I can forget about.”

Marcus was less excited about flavor variety. Pods skew menthol and tobacco. He still liked the reliability. He ran repeated pulls to see if the pod would flood. It stayed controlled. He said, “This is boring in a good way.” That sums it up.

The draw feels consistent. It is neither too tight nor too open. It stays MTL. The throat hit depends on pod. Menthol pods feel sharper. Tobacco pods feel smoother.

Dr. Walker liked the “simple labeling” angle. Pod packs often list strength clearly. He still wanted the same warnings. He also pushed youth-protection messaging. CDC and FDA public materials repeatedly stress that nicotine products should not be used by youth.

Draw Experience and Flavors

This is a narrower flavor set. The draw experience still varies by pod profile. It also varies by how warm the device is after pocket carry.

Glacier Menthol feels clean and cold. The inhale hits mint first. Cooling then spreads across the tongue. It can sting if you chain pulls. Marcus took longer pulls and said, “This wakes you up.” He meant the sharp cooling.

Mighty Menthol feels thicker. The menthol tastes darker. Cooling feels heavier. Jamal liked it in short sessions. He said, “This feels like one pull is enough.”

New Menthol sits between the two. It is less sharp than Glacier. It also feels less heavy than Mighty. I liked it as an “all day” menthol.

Tobacco Dream tastes sweet. It has a soft leaf note. It also has a caramel edge. The mouthfeel stays smooth. It also lingers.

Virginia Tobacco tastes drier. It has a faint nutty note. It feels less sweet than Tobacco Dream. Marcus preferred it. He said, “This feels more honest.”

Naked is the palate reset. It tastes minimal. It also makes the draw feel cleaner. After sweet testing, it felt useful.

Best draw experience came from Virginia Tobacco for steadiness. For menthol, New Menthol felt the most balanced.

Pros and Cons

Pros Cons
Keep battery, swap pods Flavor catalog stays narrow
Very consistent draw Pod cost can add up
Good pocket stability Not for DL style
Less mess than refilling Menthol pods can feel sharp
Easy routine for commuters Not a “flavor chaser” kit

Key Specs and Flavors

  • Price: often 1525 for kit bundles
  • Device type: power unit with disposable pods
  • Nicotine strength: commonly 5% pods
  • Activation: draw-activated
  • Battery: 400mAh rechargeable
  • Charging: USB-C, cable often included
  • Claimed runtime: “over 24 hours per charge” depends on frequency
  • Included: power unit plus pods in many kits
  • Pod flavors listed widely: Glacier Menthol, Mighty Menthol, Naked, New Menthol, Tobacco Chill, Tobacco Dream, Virginia Tobacco, Tribacco

Review Score

Metric Score Remarks
Flavor 3.8 Clean profiles, limited variety, good clarity.
Throat Hit 4.0 Menthol pods hit sharp, tobaccos smoother.
Vapor Production 3.6 MTL-focused output, consistent density.
Airflow Draw 4.1 Stable pull, little turbulence, easy pacing.
Battery Life 4.1 Rechargeable unit lasts well for commuters.
Leak Resistance 4.2 Pods stayed controlled, low gurgle risk.
Build Quality 4.0 Solid small unit, port feels secure.
Ease of Use 4.5 Simple pod swaps, no refilling.
Portability 4.1 Pocket stable, low roll risk.
Overall 4.0 A practical “daily routine” Hyppe kit.

Hyppe Infiniti 50K

Our Testing Experience

Infiniti is Hyppe going “feature heavy.” Listings describe a 360-degree display. They also describe two modes. Some describe ice control. Puff counts get framed as up to 50,000 in a normal mode, then lower in boost.

I used it as a long-run desk device. It is not subtle. It is also not light. The screen feedback changes behavior. I kept checking battery percent. I also kept checking mode status.

Marcus loved the boost idea. He used it to see if the device would get hot. The shell warmed more than Max Air, yet it stayed manageable. He said, “Boost feels like it wakes up the coil.” He also said, “Normal is smoother.”

Jamal struggled with pocket carry. The size is real. He used it in a bag. He also used it in a car compartment. He said, “This is not a pocket stick.” That is accurate.

Flavor is loud. Sweetness is heavy. Cooling can be tuned on some versions. That helps. Without tuning, some flavors feel too sweet for all-day use.

Dr. Walker focused on risk framing. He also focused on youth appeal issues tied to sweet flavors. He referenced WHO’s position that e-cigarettes often contain nicotine and can include harmful chemicals.

Draw Experience and Flavors

The draw is smoother than most high-capacity disposables. The airflow feels more open than Max Air. In normal mode, the pull feels steady. In boost mode, it feels louder. The throat feel rises. Sweetness also rises.

Blue Razz Freeze hits bright. It tastes like blue raspberry candy. Cooling comes fast. The inhale feels thick. The exhale leaves a tart edge. Marcus used boost and said, “That’s a punch.” He meant flavor intensity and throat feel.

Fizzy Cola tastes like cola syrup with a sparkling edge. Cooling sits behind it. The exhale feels sharp. In boost, it can feel harsh. Normal mode keeps it smoother.

Dubai Chocolate tastes rich. It has cocoa sweetness. It also has a faint spice note. The draw feels thicker. It can feel heavy after many pulls. I used it in short sessions. It felt like a dessert.

Hawaiian POG tastes tropical. Passion fruit hits first. Orange follows. Guava sits behind it. The blend feels layered. Jamal liked it more than expected. He said, “This tastes like a drink mix.”

Cool Mint feels clean. It also helps palate fatigue. Cooling is strong. It can feel sharp in boost. Normal mode made it easier to live with.

Sour Apple Freeze tastes sharp and candy-sour. The inhale pinches the sides of the tongue. Cooling then hits. It is exciting, yet tiring late day.

Best draw experience came from Hawaiian POG in normal mode. For a clean daily pull, Cool Mint stayed the most stable.

Pros and Cons

Pros Cons
Very long endurance Large device, not discreet
Mode control changes feel Sweetness can fatigue
Screen feedback is useful Can run warm in boost
Wide flavor list Pocket carry is awkward
Strong coil consistency Higher cost than small Hyppe

Key Specs and Flavors

  • Price: often around 1525 depending on store
  • Device type: rechargeable disposable with screen
  • Puff modes: normal up to 50K, boost lower
  • Battery: 920mAh rechargeable
  • E-liquid: 12mL
  • Nicotine: commonly 5% salt
  • Display: 360-degree screen style listings
  • Controls: mode switching, ice control on some versions
  • Flavor list from a major catalog: Blue Razz Freeze, Chewy Banana Freeze, Chewy Watermelon, Cool Mint, Dubai Chocolate, Fizzy Cola, Grape Aloe Freeze, Hawaiian POG, Kiwi Melon Bush, Mighty Mint, Misu Midnight, Naked, Peach Freeze, Rainbow Loops, Sour Apple Freeze, Sour Straw Mango, Sour Summer Fab, Sour Watermelon Freeze, Straw Razz Freeze, Virginia Tobacco, White Gummy Freeze

Review Score

Metric Score Remarks
Flavor 4.6 Loud, layered profiles, strong sweetness.
Throat Hit 4.4 Boost raises intensity, can get sharp.
Vapor Production 4.6 Dense output, strong coil drive.
Airflow Draw 4.3 Smooth pull, more open than MTL sticks.
Battery Life 4.8 Big endurance with recharge.
Leak Resistance 3.8 Large reservoir, condensation can appear.
Build Quality 4.3 Solid body, screen adds feedback value.
Ease of Use 4.0 Easy use, yet settings invite fiddling.
Portability 3.2 Large carry, better in a bag.
Overall 4.4 Best for heavy users who want control.

Compare Performance Scores of These Vapes

Device Overall Score Flavor Throat Hit Vapor Production Airflow Draw Battery Life Leak Resistance Build Quality Durability Ease of Use
Hyppe Bar 300 3.3 3.4 3.3 3.1 3.5 3.0 3.8 3.2 4.7
Hyppe Plus 400 3.4 3.3 3.2 3.0 3.5 3.2 3.8 3.3 4.7
Hyppe Ultra 600 3.6 3.7 3.5 3.3 3.8 3.4 3.9 3.4 4.7
Hyppe Max 1500 3.9 3.9 3.8 3.8 3.7 4.1 3.8 3.7 4.6
Hyppe Max Flow 2000 4.1 4.2 4.0 3.9 4.4 4.0 3.8 3.9 4.3
Hyppe Max Air 5000 4.2 4.1 4.2 4.1 4.0 4.5 3.7 4.2 4.4
Hyppe Max Pod Power Unit Kit 4.0 3.8 4.0 3.6 4.1 4.1 4.2 4.0 4.5
Hyppe Infiniti 50K 4.4 4.6 4.4 4.6 4.3 4.8 3.8 4.3 4.0

Max Air and Max Flow look like the most balanced Hyppe devices. Infiniti scores highest on output and battery life. Max Pod scores high on leak control and daily reliability. Bar and Plus behave as quick-use devices, not primaries.

Best Picks

  • Best Hyppe Vape for Daily Balance
    Winner: Hyppe Max Air 5000. It stayed consistent across days. Scores stayed strong in battery and build. The flavor highs felt real, especially Caramel Ice Cream.

  • Best Hyppe Vape for Control Focused MTL Users
    Winner: Hyppe Max Flow 2000. The airflow ring changed the experience. Flavor intensity stayed strong on tight draw. The overall score reflects that flexibility.

  • Best Hyppe Vape for Heavy Users Who Hate Replacements
    Winner: Hyppe Infiniti 50K. The battery and endurance scored highest. Boost mode gave Marcus the intensity he wanted. Portability dropped, yet the performance stayed huge.

How to Choose the Hyppe Vape

Start with vaping style. Tight MTL users will feel at home on Bar, Plus, Ultra, Max, and Max Pod. If you like a looser pull, Max Air helps. Infiniti leans open and dense.

Next, look at nicotine tolerance. Plus often shows up at 2%. That feels lighter. Many other Hyppe devices show up at 5%. That can feel intense for some adults.

Then, think about flavor fatigue. If sweet profiles wear you down, use mint or tobacco options. Max Pod helps here. Max Flow also helps since airflow tuning changes sweetness perception.

Battery needs matter. Bar and Plus are short-life tools. Ultra lasts a bit longer. Max 1500 feels like a daily casual device. Max Air adds recharge and a long run. Infiniti is built for endurance.

Maintenance style matters too. If you hate pod swaps, avoid Max Pod. If you hate tossing full devices often, Max Pod becomes attractive. If you want no routine at all, small disposables stay simplest.

Matching advice by adult user type
A light nicotine user who wants something simple can pick Hyppe Plus 400. The throat feel stays mild. The device stays easy.
A commuter who wants a stable pocket device can pick Hyppe Ultra 600 or Hyppe Max 1500. Jamal’s carry notes favored those shapes.
A flavor-focused user who wants variety can pick Hyppe Max Flow 2000. The catalog is wide. Airflow tuning helps dial the feel.
A heavy user who wants a long-run daily carry can pick Hyppe Max Air 5000. Recharge changes the whole week.
A heavy user who wants the most endurance can pick Hyppe Infiniti 50K. The score shows why. The size still matters.

Limitations

Hyppe has clear gaps. The lineup leans MTL. True high-wattage DL users will feel constrained. Marcus could push pulls, yet it still stayed disposable style. None of these replace a full mod setup.

The small devices also share a pattern. Flavor drops late life. The draw can turn airy. Sweet profiles can taste flat at the end. That showed up on Bar. It also showed up on Ultra.

The mid devices still have trade-offs. Max 1500 and Max Flow remain fixed-coil disposables. You cannot rebuild anything. You cannot swap coils. You also cannot control power. Airflow tuning on Max Flow helps. It does not turn it into a hobby device.

Max Air solves endurance. It adds bulk. Flavor variation still exists. Condensation can show up late. Pocket users will notice that.

Max Pod solves routine and leak control. Flavor range stays narrow. If you want fruit and dessert variety, this kit will feel bland. Pod costs can also creep up.

Infiniti solves endurance in a loud way. Size is the main limit. Sweetness is another. The device can feel “too much” for people who want subtle.

Nicotine risk remains across the lineup. These products stay for adult users only. People who do not use nicotine should avoid starting. WHO and CDC framing emphasizes caution, youth protection, and nicotine addiction risk.

Is the Hyppe Vape Lineup Worth It

Hyppe covers many price points. It also covers many carry styles. The small sticks feel disposable in every sense. Bar and Plus work for quick use. Ultra improves consistency. Max 1500 feels like the first real daily tool.

Max Flow adds airflow control. That changes comfort. It also changes flavor texture. Tight airflow makes sweetness feel thicker. Open airflow makes it feel brighter. That matters during long days. It also matters outdoors.

Max Air is the best “classic” Hyppe daily pick. Recharge changes the week. The device stays consistent across more of its life. The flat body sits well in a pocket. The lanyard option helps some users. Coil consistency stays good. A major review calls out the mesh coil and rechargeable battery.

The pod kit feels practical. It is not exciting. It behaves well. Jamal’s daily-carry notes favored it. Leak control scored high. The draw stayed consistent. Flavor range is narrow. That is the cost of simplicity.

Infiniti feels like Hyppe chasing the high-capacity trend. The screen feedback is useful. Modes change the hit. Flavor is intense. Battery life is huge. The device is large. Portability scored lowest. That trade-off stays constant.

Value depends on what you want. If you want the simplest cheap stick, Bar works. If you want low-strength, Plus fits. If you want a better small MTL device, Ultra is the pick. If you want a daily disposable that lasts longer, Max 1500 fits. If you want variety and airflow control, Max Flow wins. If you want long-run recharge without a giant body, Max Air makes sense. If you want a routine that feels cleaner, Max Pod helps. If you want maximum endurance and strong output, Infiniti is the one.

Nicotine use carries risk. That fact does not change with better flavor. It also does not change with a screen. CDC and WHO both keep the tone cautious.

Pro Tips for Hyppe Vape

  • Keep pulls shorter on sweet flavors. Flavor stays cleaner that way.
  • If the device tastes “dry,” pause for a bit. Chain pulls push heat.
  • Store disposables mouthpiece-up in a pocket. That reduces wet draw risk.
  • Wipe the mouthpiece each day. Condensation builds during normal use.
  • On airflow-ring models, start tighter, then open slowly. Find comfort first.
  • For menthol profiles, use shorter sessions. Cooling fatigue is real.
  • Recharge only on stable surfaces. Avoid charging in pockets or bedding.
  • If a device runs hot, stop using it. Check for damage.
  • Keep devices away from heat in cars. E-liquid behavior changes in heat.

FAQs

How long do Hyppe disposables usually last
It depends on puff class and your frequency. Bar and Plus are short-life tools. Max Air can last much longer, since it recharges and carries more liquid.

Do Hyppe devices leak in pockets
In our carry tests, early life leak risk stayed low. Late life condensation showed up more. Jamal saw it most on longer-run devices after heavy use. The pod kit stayed driest.

How often should pods be replaced on the Max Pod kit
Replace when flavor drops or the draw turns “wet.” Heavy users will reach that point faster. Marcus also watched for burnt taste shifts. Those shifts often mark end-of-pod life.

Are Hyppe flavors consistent across the lineup
They share a “sweet forward” style on many fruits. Cooling also shows up often. Max Pod flavors lean menthol and tobacco. Max Air and Infiniti have the most dramatic flavor differences.

What nicotine strength should an adult choose
Strength depends on personal tolerance and current nicotine use. Plus often lists 2%. Many other Hyppe devices list 5%. Check packaging before buying. Avoid guessing.

Do the bigger Hyppe devices hit harsher
They can. The output is denser. Cooling profiles can sting more. Boost modes can raise throat feel too. Normal modes feel smoother.

What is the biggest difference between Max Flow and Max Air
Max Flow’s key feature is airflow control. Max Air’s key feature is recharge plus large liquid. Max Air also tends to feel steadier across days.

Does the Hyppe Infiniti screen matter in real use
It changed my behavior. I watched battery percent more. I also adjusted modes more. Marcus liked that control. Jamal did not like the size cost.

Are Hyppe vapes safe
No nicotine vape can be described as safe. Nicotine is addictive. Public health guidance stresses caution and youth protection.

Sources

  • National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. Public Health Consequences of E-Cigarettes. 2018. https://nap.nationalacademies.org/catalog/24952/public-health-consequences-of-e-cigarettes
  • World Health Organization. Electronic cigarettes (E-cigarettes). 2024. https://www.who.int/publications/i/item/WPR-2024-DHP-001
  • Gordon T, Karey E, Rebuli ME, et al. E-Cigarette Toxicology. Annual Review of Pharmacology and Toxicology. 2021. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9386787/
  • Eshraghian EA, Al-Delaimy WK. A review of constituents identified in e-cigarette liquids and aerosols. Tobacco Induced Diseases. 2021. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33585727/
About the Author: Chris Miller

Chris Miller is the lead reviewer and primary author at VapePicks. He coordinates the site’s hands-on testing process and writes the final verdicts that appear in each review. His background comes from long-term work in consumer electronics, where day-to-day reliability matters more than launch-day impressions. That approach carries into nicotine-device coverage, with a focus on build quality, device consistency, and the practical details that show up after a device has been carried and used for several days.

In testing, Chris concentrates on battery behavior and charging stability, especially signs like abnormal heat, fast drain, or uneven output. He also tracks leaking, condensate buildup, and mouthpiece hygiene in normal routines such as commuting, short work breaks, and longer evening sessions. When a device includes draw activation or button firing, he watches for misfires and inconsistent triggering. Flavor and throat hit notes are treated as subjective experience, recorded for context, and separated from health interpretation.

Chris works with the fixed VapePicks testing team, which includes a high-intensity tester for stress and heat checks, plus an everyday-carry tester who focuses on portability and pocket reliability. For safety context, VapePicks relies on established public guidance and a clinical advisor’s limited review of risk language, rather than personal medical recommendations.

VapePicks content is written for adults. Nicotine is highly addictive, and e-cigarettes are not for youth, pregnant individuals, or people who do not already use nicotine products.