A $46 night cream from a company with an F rating from the Better Business Bureau and 29 consecutive unanswered complaints.
Texture — Rich night cream
Key Active — Peptide blend (concentrations undisclosed)
Best For — See below
Price Tier — $$$
The formula itself is not the problem. It is a reasonable, rich night cream, it is fragrance-free, and people who use it generally report that their skin feels good. There is nothing alarming in the bottle.
The peptides it contains are real, recognized ingredients.
If you already own it and your skin is happy, keep using it.
On the peptides — the same caveat we apply everywhere. A 2026 systematic review pooled 19 randomized peptide trials and found only two tested topical peptides; the wrinkle benefit came almost entirely from oral collagen supplements. Peptides are also large molecules, and the skin is very good at keeping large molecules out.
Peptides are gentle and well tolerated, and there is a real argument for them in skin that cannot handle retinoids. But be clear on the comparison: retinoids have decades of large, independent evidence. Peptides do not. Gentler, yes. Equally proven, no.
The company's Better Business Bureau rating is F. It is not accredited, and it has 29 complaints in three years — all 29 unanswered. The recurring themes are subscription cancellations that were refused, charges without shipment, and support that appears to be AI-only.
That is not a comment on the cream. It is a comment on what happens if something goes wrong, and it is the most useful thing we can tell you before you enter your card details.
Its page titled "Ingredient Transparency" discloses zero concentrations — and omits three ingredients that appear on the product page itself. The marketing says "5X Peptide Complex"; the transparency page lists four peptides; the product page shows six. Three different numbers, from the same company, about the same product.
Despite the name, the brand is not doctor-founded, and no founder is publicly named.
$46 for 2 oz of an undisclosed peptide blend.
🧬 Peptides — collagen-boosting
There is little to analyze, because the company will not say what is in it at what level — and its own two disclosure pages contradict each other.
That is the finding. A brand that names a page "Ingredient Transparency" and then discloses no concentrations, lists a different number of peptides than its marketing, and omits ingredients that appear elsewhere on its own site has told you something important — just not about skincare.