GunterHofmann
New member
- Joined
- Mar 21, 2026
- Messages
- 3
Something I don’t see explained properly is that people compare RC categories based on strength, when the real difference is how much control you actually have once it starts.
With stimulants (3-MMC, NEP, α-PVP), even when things go wrong, it’s usually linear.
You feel the ramp-up, you feel the strain building, and even if you overshoot, there’s still some level of feedback from your body.
It’s not “safe” — but it’s at least somewhat readable.
Noids (JWH-018, 5F-ADB, AB-FUBINACA) are different.
The issue isn’t just potency — it’s the lack of proportionality.
Small changes don’t scale the way people expect.
Onset can feel abrupt, and the response isn’t always predictable or gradual.
That’s why comparing them to cannabis (or even to other RCs) misses the point entirely.
If I had to reduce it:
1. stimulants = escalation you can usually track
2. noids = effects that can disconnect from expectation
Same umbrella term, completely different mechanics.
Most of the bad experiences I’ve read here seem to come from applying the wrong mental model to the wrong category.
With stimulants (3-MMC, NEP, α-PVP), even when things go wrong, it’s usually linear.
You feel the ramp-up, you feel the strain building, and even if you overshoot, there’s still some level of feedback from your body.
It’s not “safe” — but it’s at least somewhat readable.
Noids (JWH-018, 5F-ADB, AB-FUBINACA) are different.
The issue isn’t just potency — it’s the lack of proportionality.
Small changes don’t scale the way people expect.
Onset can feel abrupt, and the response isn’t always predictable or gradual.
That’s why comparing them to cannabis (or even to other RCs) misses the point entirely.
If I had to reduce it:
1. stimulants = escalation you can usually track
2. noids = effects that can disconnect from expectation
Same umbrella term, completely different mechanics.
Most of the bad experiences I’ve read here seem to come from applying the wrong mental model to the wrong category.