I slathered this on my face for 30 days straight. No breaks. No cheating.
My left cheek has a sunspot that’s been mocking me since 2019 — and I wanted it gone. Turns out, this serum doesn’t erase spots. It does something weirder.
Lyma calls this a “laser serum” — $440 for 30ml. The claim: it mimics fractional laser results without the downtime. That’s a big, stupid promise.
Liposomal delivery
Fat bubbles carry actives deeper than your average cream. Skin drinks it in 10 seconds flat.
No water base
It’s 100% active ingredients. Water is the first ingredient in almost everything else — not here.
One pump rule
You only need one pump for your whole face. I used two the first week because I don’t trust instructions.
No retinol. No acids. No nonsense. The formula leans on peptides and growth factors — the stuff that tells your cells to stop being lazy.
- Copper Tripeptide-1: Signals collagen production like a tiny cellular megaphone
- Palmitoyl Tripeptide-38: Firms without the sting — think Botox-lite but legal
- Superoxide Dismutase: An antioxidant that hunts free radicals like a bloodhound
- Sodium Hyaluronate: Hydration that doesn’t pill under makeup
Feels like liquid silk — thin, almost watery, but turns velvety the second it hits skin. No stickiness. No grease. My oily T-zone actually liked it.
Week 3 hit and I noticed my pores looked… smaller. Not gone — just less like they were auditioning for a macro lens. That’s when I stopped rolling my eyes.
My sunspot is still here — just fainter, like it’s fading into a bad memory. Texture improved more than pigmentation. Skin looks plump, not plastic.
It’s not a laser in a bottle — nothing is. But it’s the closest I’ve seen from a dropper. My skin looks better, feels better, and I’m not mad about the price tag. Just not thrilled either.