**Hype vs. Reality**
Serjical’s Brightening Serum has 20K five-star reviews. I read them. Half sound like the brand wrote them. The other half are from people who haven’t tried actual vitamin C.
The problem? This isn’t a real vitamin C serum. It’s a marketing campaign in a dropper bottle.
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**SECTION BLOCK 2 — 🔬**
**What You’re Actually Buying**
$38 for 1 oz. The bottle screams “rapper-backed luxury.” The ingredient list whispers “drugstore body lotion.”
Texture
It’s thick. Like, borderline sticky. Absorbs in 45 seconds — not the 10-second instant dry-down they claim.
Smell
Synthetic orange. Not “fresh-squeezed.” Think gummy vitamins left in a hot car.
Packaging
Dark glass. Good. But the dropper sucks — half the product gets stuck in the rubber bulb.
Photo: Kier in Sight Archives / Unsplash
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**SECTION BLOCK 3 — ⭐**
**The Ingredient Tea**
Ascorbic acid is listed fourth. After water, glycerin, and a random fruit extract. That’s not enough to do anything.
- Ascorbic Acid (Vitamin C): Listed 4th — barely active
- Tetrahexyldecyl Ascorbate: Better form, but low concentration
- Niacinamide: Nice. But it’s here to mask the weak C.
- Fragrance: Why. Just why.
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**SECTION BLOCK 4 — 💰**
**The Feel Test**
First pump: watery-slash-oily. Spreads fine. Then sits on your skin like a layer of Saran Wrap. Dewy? Sure, if you like “I just ran a marathon” dewy.
Week two: no stinging, no purging. Also no brightening. My skin looked the same. Just shinier.
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**SECTION BLOCK 5 — ⚠️**
**The Honest Results**
Four weeks in: my dark spots didn’t fade. My skin didn’t glow. I just had slightly more even texture — which I credit to the niacinamide, not the vitamin C.
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**SECTION BLOCK 6 — 📦**
**Final Call**
This isn’t a bad moisturizer. It’s a bad vitamin C serum. If you want the rapper’s vibe, buy the merch. If you want brightening, buy literally anything else.