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Stop pressing that Lyma into your face like you’re trying to erase a crime scene. The laser doesn’t work by friction.
It works by light. Pressing hard actually dims the light penetration by compressing the skin. You’re literally paying $1,900 to fight yourself.
It’s a low-level laser therapy device. $1,900. The claim that got me? “Clinical-grade collagen stimulation at home.” I bit.
510nm Blue Light
Kills acne bacteria on contact. You’ll smell burnt hair — that’s normal.
610nm Red Light
The collagen builder. Takes time, but it’s the real MVP.
850nm Near-Infrared
Deepest penetration. This is the one you’re sabotaging by pressing hard.
No serums. No creams. Just three wavelengths of light and a charging dock. The hero here is the near-infrared — it reaches 5mm into tissue, which is deeper than any LED mask on the market.
- 510nm Blue: Surface bacteria killer
- 610nm Red: Surface collagen trigger
- 850nm NIR: Deep tissue repair & inflammation
- 30-minute auto shutoff: Forces you to stop before you overdo it
It feels like a warm marble rolling over your skin. No vibration, no heat spike — just a steady, silent hum. First impression: “Is this even doing anything?”
Week 3 hit different. My left jawline acne cyst halved in size overnight. The unexpected part: it sucks at treating active breakouts on the first pass — you need 3 consecutive days for blue light to actually clear a pimple.
My fine lines are less like fine lines and more like “lines I have to squint to see now.” My chin acne? Still there, but less angry. It didn’t erase my pores — nothing does.
It’s the most expensive tool in my drawer, but it’s also the only one that made me cancel a laser appointment. Just don’t squeeze the life out of it.