The Story
Why it exists.
Loverdose launched in 2011 as part of Diesel's broader fragrance collection. The concept lives in its name, a lover's dose, or love as overdose, built around the idea that desire is a chemical trigger. Olivier Cresp structured it to hit that hypothalamus register from the first spray. Star anise and mandarin open the conversation with an aromatic punch that immediately signals the fragrance's intentions; the citrus brightness of mandarin provides an initial sweetness that tempers the spice. Licorice, jasmine, and gardenia carry the narrative forward, with jasmine sambac providing lush floral depth while gardenia adds a creamy, slightly indolic richness.
If this were a song
Community picks
Wicked Game
Chris Isaak
The Beginning
Loverdose launched in 2011 as part of Diesel's broader fragrance collection. The concept lives in its name, a lover's dose, or love as overdose, built around the idea that desire is a chemical trigger. Olivier Cresp structured it to hit that hypothalamus register from the first spray. Star anise and mandarin open the conversation with an aromatic punch that immediately signals the fragrance's intentions; the citrus brightness of mandarin provides an initial sweetness that tempers the spice. Licorice, jasmine, and gardenia carry the narrative forward, with jasmine sambac providing lush floral depth while gardenia adds a creamy, slightly indolic richness.
What makes Loverdose unusual is the licorice carrying through the entire arc, present in the heart, repeating in the base, never fully dissolved into something softer. The jasmine sambac and gardenia provide the floral cushion, but the gourmand spine holds everything together. It's sweet and dark at the same time, not innocent, not dangerous, somewhere in between that most people have a real opinion about. The licorice note itself is bold and unmistakable, creating an almost anise-forward character that persists as the more delicate floral elements unfold around it.
The Evolution
The opening arrives sharp. Star anise's camphor-like edge hits first, medicinal, almost harsh, before mandarin's sweetness softens the blow. Ten minutes in, the licorice takes over and the narrative changes. Jasmine sambac and gardenia bloom into a creamy white floral heart, but the sweetness here isn't airy. It's dense. Almost syrupy. The vanilla and ambroxan enter quietly and take their time, but once they settle, the drydown becomes the real story, warm, slightly powdery, clinging close to skin for hours.
Cultural Impact
Loverdose occupies a specific corner of the gourmand family, something with actual teeth. The star anise and licorice combination drew strong reactions from launch, which is exactly what Diesel intended. The fragrance is unapologetically bold, with the licorice note providing a dark, almost medicinal sweetness that refuses to disappear into the background. It's been a polarizing fragrance for over a decade, the kind that people have a decisive opinion about after one spray.
The House
Italy · Est. 1978
Diesel is an Italian fashion and lifestyle brand founded in 1978 by entrepreneur Renzo Rosso. Headquartered in Breganze, in the Veneto region of northern Italy, the company grew from its origins in denim into a global lifestyle label with approximately 400 stores worldwide. Diesel is recognized for its bold, provocative approach to fashion design, consistently challenging conventions through unconventional marketing campaigns and a distinctive visual identity. The brand's fragrance division extends this ethos into scent, producing men's and women's perfumes that reflect Diesel's rebellious spirit and focus on individual expression.
If this were a song
Community picks
Dark, intimate, and a little reckless, this is music that knows what it wants. A slow, heavy bass line under a single electric guitar. The vocals barely above a whisper. The mood is late night, single room, something almost forbidden. That's what Loverdose smells like.
Wicked Game
Chris Isaak





























