July in NYC. Humidity so thick you could chew it. I slapped on Ursa Major’s Force Field moisturizer every day for a month because it promised to “balance” skin against city grime and sweat. Spoiler: it does not survive a subway commute.
By week two, I realized the real test isn’t pollution — it’s my own forehead at 3 PM. This thing breaks apart like cheap foundation on oily zones. The marketing is lying to you.
IMG_1: A sweaty, slightly streaky arm swatch at high noon. Not cute.
It’s a daily SPF 30 moisturizer — $38 for 2 oz. The big claim: “climate-adaptive” formula that fights humidity and urban grime. I bought it because I wanted one step that didn’t melt off.
Zinc Oxide 20%
Actual mineral SPF — no chemical sunscreen sting. But it sits white for a solid 90 seconds before disappearing.
“Adaptive” Texture
Thinks it can read your skin’s oil levels. It can’t. It’s a light cream that works great in winter, less in July.
Scent-Free-ish
Smells like a forest — pine and birch. Nice if you’re into smelling like a hiking trail at your desk.
IMG_2: The bottle next to a subway grate. Very on-brand.
The formula is actually smart — it uses birch bark extract to calm redness and willow bark (natural salicylic acid) to unclog pores. But the “force field” is just film-forming polymers that dry down sticky. Not a shield. A glue trap for dust.
- Birch Bark Extract: Anti-inflammatory — calms my angry chin pimples
- Willow Bark: Mild exfoliation — keeps texture in check without peeling
- Zinc Oxide 20%: Broad spectrum SPF — no burning, but thick
- Aloe Leaf Juice: Cooling base — saves you from looking like a tomato
IMG_3: Ingredient list close-up with a sticky note reading “not climate-proof.”
First pump: feels like a cold yogurt. Spreads thin, dries down matte-ish, but leaves a tacky film that catches lint from your t-shirt. Day one, I thought — okay, this is fine for winter.
Week two: I wore it to a rooftop party. By hour three, my T-zone looked like a glazed donut. The “balancing” claim? Only works if you’re not actually sweating. The one thing it does well — no white cast on my medium skin tone after 30 seconds of rubbing.
IMG_4: Fingerprint on a phone screen after wearing it — greasy truth.
Measurable wins: fewer red patches on my cheeks. No new breakouts. Measurable fails: oil control is a lie — I blot twice daily now. My pores look the same, not smaller. The SPF protection is real, but the “force field” is more like a suggestion.
IMG_5: Blotting papers after 4 hours — a crime scene.
It’s a good winter SPF with a summer identity crisis. If you want protection that actually stays put in heat, look elsewhere. For brisk October mornings? Perfect. For July? Absolute no.