Peach Slices quietly killed the snail mucin. The new peptide complex is supposed to be just as soothing—but it’s not the same toner.
The old version felt like a hug for angry skin. The new one feels like a strategy meeting. That matters when you’re already breaking out.
It’s $14 for 5 oz. The claim: “blemish busting” without stripping. I bought it because I wanted a hydrating toner that didn’t hate my acne.
Peptide Complex (not snail)
Replaces the mucin—claims to calm and repair, but feels less viscous
Salicylic Acid 0.5%
Low enough to not peel your face off, high enough to actually clear pores
Niacinamide
The usual peacekeeper. Helps with redness without drying
Photo: ibnu ihza / Unsplash
No snail mucin here—just peptides, BHA, and niacinamide holding it down. The peptide complex is the star, but it’s not as instantly soothing as the original slime.
- Peptide Complex: Claims to rebuild barrier—feels more watery than snail did
- Salicylic Acid 0.5%: Gentle exfoliation, no sting
- Niacinamide 2%: Calms redness without pilling
- Panthenol: The real hydrator here, not the peptides
It’s watery—almost like fancy tap water. Absorbs in 8 seconds. No stickiness, no film. First impression: “Is this… doing anything?”
Week 2: My cysts stopped getting angrier overnight. But my dry patches felt less coddled. The old snail toner was a blanket. This is a thin sheet. Surprising: it stung on broken skin for a few days—snail never did that.
Fewer new whiteheads by week 3. But my existing acne didn’t vanish—just stopped multiplying. Skin looked less red, but more matte than dewy.
Peach Slices made a good toner for oily acne skin—but they abandoned their dry-skinned fans. I miss the snail. The peptides are fine, not special.