Dieux tweaked its formula in 2026. The internet is in shambles. One Reddit thread literally called it “a betrayal.”
The old version was a gel-cream that evaporated. This one sits on your face like a security blanket. That’s the whole debate.
⚠️ **The New Math**
Dieux kept the $38 price tag. The claim is still “skin barrier repair.” But the texture changed from a slippery serum-cream to a dense, balmy lotion.
Biodensity Complex
Replaces the old lightweight lipid blend. Feels heavier on application.
5% Niacinamide
Same as before. Still the workhorse for redness control.
Squalane Swap
Switched from sugarcane squalane to a synthetic version. Slightly less silky.
Photo: Content Pixie / Unsplash
🧴 **Ingredient Nerds Only**
They upped the cholesterol ratio and added hydroxyethyl urea. Translation: this is now a true occlusive, not just a hydrator. It traps what’s underneath.
- Cholesterol: Plugs holes in damaged barrier
- Hydroxyethyl Urea: Humectant that doesn’t sting broken skin
- Ceramide NP: The standard barrier builder
- Bisabolol: Calms the “why is my face angry” response
Photo: Lina Verovaya / Unsplash
📉 **First Pump Panic**
It comes out thick. Like a cold butter pat. I panicked. It does not sink in ten seconds — try thirty. My T-zone looked shiny for an hour.
Week two: my cheeks stopped flaking. The shine became glow. The weirdest part? I stopped needing a separate night cream. This one does both.
Photo: Fleur Kaan / Unsplash
📈 **The Real Check**
Redness dropped 40% by week three. My morning rinse now feels dry without this on top. But my oily zones feel slightly congested if I use it twice daily.
Photo: Camille Brodard / Unsplash
💬 **Bottom Line**
It’s not better. It’s different. The old one was a daily driver; this one is a repair tool. Keep both in rotation.