Naomi Osaka’s Oshun line dropped and I side-eyed it hard. Another athlete selling $45 cleansers? Yawn.
But then I saw the ingredient deck — no fragrance, actual niacinamide percentages, and a moisturizer that costs less than a single tennis lesson. That got my attention.
Three products: Hydrate & Glow Cleanser ($22), Dewy Barrier Moisturizer ($38), and the star — the Renewal Serum ($45). I bought the serum first because it claims “visible brightness in 2 weeks.” Bold.
No Fragrance, No Drama
Smells like nothing. Literally nothing. My reactive skin didn’t flinch.
The Pump Actually Works
Not one of those dribbly dispensers. One pump = one face. Consistent.
Glass Bottles
Heavy. Feels like $45. But also breakable — don’t drop it in the shower.
Photo: Fleur Kaan / Unsplash
No fairy dust here. The serum leans on 5% niacinamide (the sweet spot — not the 10% that burns) and a stabilized vitamin C derivative that doesn’t oxidize in two weeks. The moisturizer has squalane and ceramides — boring but bulletproof.
- Niacinamide: controls oil + brightens without peeling
- Tetrahexyldecyl Ascorbate: vitamin C that actually penetrates
- Squalane: moisture that doesn’t clog
- Ceramides: barrier repair for over-washed faces
Photo: Poko Skincare / Unsplash
The serum is a thin gel — slides on like water, absorbs in maybe 8 seconds. No tacky film. The moisturizer is thicker than I expected, almost a balm texture that melts on contact. First thought: “Is this gonna break me out?”
Week 2: It didn’t. But here’s the surprise — my T-zone actually got LESS oily. That squalane + niacinamide combo tricked my face into calming down.
Photo: Alexandru Zdrobău / Unsplash
Three weeks in: my post-acne marks faded maybe 30%. Not miraculous, but visible. Texture is smoother. My skin looks… rested? That’s the best word. Not glowing like a lightbulb, but not dull either. Dark circles? Untouched — no serum fixes those.
Photo: yunona uritsky / Unsplash
Oshun is legit — not because Naomi’s name is on it, but because someone actually formulated for real skin, not Instagram filters. It’s boring in the best way: it works quietly.