

Invictus Victory Elixir Decant
Not sure which size? Start with 10ml — enough for 10–15 full wears to know if you love it before buying the bottle.
Top: Lavender · Cardamom · Black Pepper
Heart: Incense · Patchouli
Base: Vanilla Pod · Tonka Bean
Lavender and spices up top, dark patchouli and incense in the middle, then a warm vanilla-tonka base with an unlisted coconut accord that appears around the 30-minute mark. It smells nothing like the original Invictus — no grapefruit, no sea water, no aquatic freshness. It's rich, tropical, and sweet in a way that divides opinion immediately. Paco Rabanne retails it at $185.
The decant exists for exactly this: the coconut-vanilla direction is decisive, not neutral. Find out which side you're on before the bottle.
Fall and winter only. Evenings and special occasions. Masculine. Two to three sprays maximum. 8–14 hours.
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Longevity, skin chemistry, the collector's take, and how we authenticate.
Invictus Victory Elixir launched in 2023 as the Elixir-tier intensification of the Victory EDP that Rabanne had released two years earlier. The formula: take the Victory's pink pepper-lemon-olibanum-vanilla architecture and darken it — remove the lemon top note, replace the pink pepper-lemon opening with cardamom and black pepper, deepen the olibanum heart toward full incense-patchouli, and extend the vanilla base into vanilla pod territory. The result should theoretically be a more concentrated, more straightforwardly intense version of what the Victory EDP does. What actually happens is different and more interesting.
Thirty minutes into wear on most skin types, an unlisted coconut accord emerges. This is the Victory Elixir's most community-discussed and most compositionally distinctive quality — the tropical, slightly creamy, piña colada-adjacent warmth that the note pyramid does not disclose and that has generated the composition's most consistent comparison: "it reminds me of Jean Paul Gaultier's Le Beau Le Parfum — it feels as if you've mixed the original Invictus Victory with Le Beau" from the iFragrance reviewer who tracked the development most carefully. The "best Invictus flanker I've smelled — I get that hint of Le Beau smell at first" from the Parfumo collector who placed the DNA reference precisely. This is not a subtle coconut note. Multiple reviewers independently identify it as tropical and prominent enough to shift the composition's character meaningfully from the Victory EDP's more austere incense-amber direction.
The Victory EDP vs. Victory Elixir buying decision earns direct engagement because they occupy adjacent territory and a collector who owns the original Victory EDP and is considering the Elixir needs to understand whether the differences justify owning both. The honest community verdict: they are different enough to earn separate rotation slots, but the community does not agree on which is better. "I slightly prefer the depth and coconut-like edge of the Elixir" from the collector who owns both and finds the tropical dimension the Elixir's strongest advantage. "The original Victory smells better, lasts longer and it's cheaper — there's just no practical reason to have both" from the reviewer who ran the direct comparison and found the Elixir redundant. The specific differentiators: Victory EDP is drier, more austere, more office-capable; Victory Elixir is sweeter, more tropical, more assertive, and better suited to evenings where you want to make an impression.
The performance is the composition's most emphatic and most universally credentialed quality. "9 to 14 hours on skin, 24 hours on clothing" from the German collector whose documentation earns the most consistent independent corroboration. "The dry-down reveals a more masculine, spicy, and slightly smoky scent that clings onto the skin effortlessly for more than a day" from the Escentual review that tracked fabric persistence specifically. "Will definitely be getting a backup because I'm sure it'll be discontinued" from the collector whose performance enthusiasm overrides their pricing concerns. The longevity documentation for Victory Elixir is among the strongest in the entire Rabanne catalog — matching or exceeding the original 1 Million EDT's notorious fabric persistence.
🔺 The Scent Pyramid
Top Notes (0–20 min)
Lavender · Cardamom · Black Pepper
The opening is the composition's most spiced and most energetic chapter. Lavender provides immediate aromatic-cool warmth, connecting to the Victory EDP's lavender presence but now placed at the top rather than the heart. Cardamom adds warm, slightly eucalyptic aromatic spice; black pepper contributes dry, sharp, clean heat. "A captivating blend of Cardamom, Lavender, and Black Pepper, crafting a spicy and aromatic outset" — the opening is more aggressively spiced than the Victory EDP's gentler pink pepper-lemon entry and signals the composition's darker, more demanding character immediately.
Heart Notes (20 min–2 hrs — the coconut accord appears here)
Incense · Patchouli
The heart is the composition's darkest and most architecturally interesting chapter. Incense provides warm, resinous, slightly smoky depth — deeper and more assertive than the Victory EDP's olibanum, which is more refined and less smoky. Patchouli adds earthy, slightly dark, warm-woody depth. At approximately 30 minutes, the unlisted coconut accord emerges — "a surprising tropical edge that is not listed in the notes; a coconut accord appears after 30 minutes and leaves you mesmerised." The incense-patchouli-coconut combination creates the "tropical holiday with a piña colada and the faint smell of wooden deckchair heating in the sun" impression that earns the Le Beau comparison and distinguishes the Elixir from simpler sweet amber compositions.
Base Notes (2 hrs through 8–14 hrs)
Vanilla Pod · Tonka Bean
The base is the composition's warmest and most persistently dominant chapter — the chapter responsible for the 24-hour fabric longevity documentation. Vanilla pod — the full-spectrum vanilla with its slightly smoky, animalic, complex character as opposed to extracted vanillin — provides depth and persistence; tonka bean adds coumarin-rich, slightly almond-sweet warmth. "Extremely sweet, rich, and smells like buttered popcorn to some noses" from the reviewers who find the base's sweetness the composition's most challenging quality. On skin: warm, slightly tropical, deeply sweet, persistently present.
What it smells like on skin:
The cardamom-lavender-pepper opening is immediately spiced and energetic — darker and more assertive than the Victory EDP's conventional opening. After 20 minutes the incense-patchouli heart deepens the composition toward its most interesting chapter: smoky, earthy, resinous, with the unexpected coconut accord arriving around the 30-minute mark and shifting the composition toward the tropical-sweet-incense combination that earns the Le Beau DNA comparison. The vanilla pod-tonka base that follows is the composition's most defining chapter — very sweet, very warm, very persistent. "Rich, sweet, and smells fantastic; a blast of vanilla with incense, lavender, and cardamom perfectly blended in the background — super easy to wear; anyone can pull this off" from the collector whose 10/10 review captures the advocacy camp at its most emphatic.
Performance & Wear Guide
- Longevity: 8–14 hours on skin documented across multiple independent reviews. 24+ hours on fabric — "clings onto skin effortlessly for more than a day" and "24 hours on clothing." Among the strongest longevity documentation in the Rabanne catalog.
- Projection: Strong for the first hour — "great sillage; very strong but not strong enough to give someone a headache." Settles to moderate after the first hour while remaining detectable. "Leaves very good scent cloud that gets close to the skin after 5–7 hours."
- Sillage: Above average. "Its impressive sillage has already become the talk of my workplace" from the Parfumo reviewer who documented the social response. The vanilla-incense trail is warm, distinctive, and consistently noticed.
- Season: Fall and winter exclusively. "Best suited for the colder months" — the vanilla pod-tonka base reads very heavy in warm weather. Below 65°F is the ideal wearing temperature.
- Occasion: Evening wear, date nights, cold-weather social occasions. Not office-appropriate at full application. The sweetness and projection together require cold, open air to perform at their best.
- Application: 2–3 sprays maximum. "Solid projection and longevity — super easy to wear, anyone can pull this off" at restrained application. The vanilla pod-tonka sweetness compounds at higher spray counts toward the "cloying" end of the spectrum.
- Victory EDP vs. Elixir: Victory EDP — drier, more austere, olibanum-led, better for restrained office wear, more nuanced. Victory Elixir — sweeter, tropical coconut accord, stronger projection, better longevity, more evening-specific. Both earn separate rotation slots but not everyone needs both.
Performance varies with skin chemistry and ambient temperature. Apply to pulse points. 2 sprays in cold open air for best results.
All Paco Rabanne inventory at Aromatick is authenticated before entering the catalog. Bottle construction, fill level, and juice character are verified before entering the catalog.
These are authentic Paco Rabanne compositions at below-boutique pricing under the first sale doctrine — the same legal framework that governs all Aromatick inventory.
Decants are hand-filled into sterile atomizers from authenticated source bottles. Every decant is sealed and labeled before shipping. Questions: contact us.
— Rodney Gallagher, founder, Aromatick.com





