Worth a look General Solid signal

Forever But Which Forever?

A product name so generic it pulls in a Netflix teen romance, an indie MMO, and random skincare Reddit threads. There's no coherent product here to review.

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By Glow · your honest beauty editor
· Published Recently · 186 real voices · 10 videos
forever
Product still · forever

What real owners actually say

Here's the awkward truth: the user comments provided have absolutely nothing to do with a product called 'Forever.' They're a grab bag of skincare and bodycare community discussions — glycolic acid toner for scalp dandruff (The Ordinary's, specifically, praised to the heavens for multi-use), the double-shampoo method for actually clean roots, hormonal chin hair and at-home laser devices (Braun gets a shoutout), spearmint tea as a folk remedy for hormonal acne, and the emotional rollercoaster of finding a two-inch chin hair that wasn't there yesterday. These are genuinely useful, relatable beauty threads — the kind where women trade real tips and laugh about the indignities of aging under the influence of sex hormones. The Ordinary's glycolic acid toner is the closest thing to a hero product here, with multiple users raving about its versatility and absurdly long-lasting bottle. There's also concern about Estée Lauder's acquisition of Deciem (The Ordinary's parent) and fears that formulations or prices could shift. But to be crystal clear: none of this is about 'Forever.' It's community wisdom from beauty forums that got swept into this query by keyword accident.

What Glow loved

  • The Ordinary glycolic acid toner — accidentally spotlighted — is genuinely beloved for multi-use value
  • Netflix's 'Forever' series received heartfelt praise for authentic storytelling and music
  • Farever MMO has charming art style and satisfying combat according to early players

What Glow didn't

  • No coherent product called 'Forever' exists across the provided data layers
  • User comments are entirely unrelated skincare threads swept in by keyword
  • No brand information whatsoever to anchor any product identity
  • Three different YouTube topics share only a word, not a product category

The YouTube reviewers who actually tried it

The YouTube layer is a three-way split with nothing in common except the word 'forever.' First: Netflix's 'Forever,' a teen romance series starring Lovie Simone and Michael Cooper Jr. Reviewers and audiences genuinely loved it — praised for authentic Black teen relationships, gorgeous music supervision, Wood Harris as a deeply layered TV dad, and emotional resonance that made viewers cry. Multiple people begged for Season 2. Criticisms were character-level (Keisha frustrated viewers with her decisions) but framed as realistic teen behavior, not writing flaws. Second: 'Farever,' an indie MMO with a colorful early-2000s art style (Seal, Flyff, Wildstar vibes). Gameplay content creators found it surprisingly fun — satisfying block-based combat, build variety, crafting, and dungeons. Notes that it starts slow until around level 7 when the arsenal system opens. Third: a retro review of 'No One Lives Forever,' the classic spy FPS, praised for genuinely funny writing and stellar voice acting that still holds up. These three have nothing to do with each other or with any beauty product.

Keisha & Justin on “Forever”
@Charles Brockman III (TheOnlyCB3) · 1,567,488 views · 6,830,000 subs
Glow's pick
Where the stories disagree

The caveats nobody puts on the bottle

When user voice and video reviewers contradict each other, that's usually where the truth lives. Here's the disagreement.

  • USER comments are 100% skincare/bodycare community discussion (glycolic acid, shampoo, chin hair) with zero mention of 'Forever' as a product — suggesting a keyword collision rather than genuine product data.
  • VIDEO layer splits three ways: Netflix's 'Forever' series, the MMO 'Farever,' and classic game 'No One Lives Forever' — no unified product identity exists.
  • No BRAND claims were provided, making it impossible to establish what 'Forever' even is or verify any positioning against user or reviewer experiences.
  • The Netflix 'Forever' and MMO 'Farever' both have genuinely positive reception in their respective videos, but neither relates to beauty or to each other.
  • The category hint of 'general' is the only honest pick — no canonical beauty, entertainment, or gaming category cleanly fits this fragmented data.
Watched & read

The 10 videos that informed this verdict

Top YouTube reviews ranked by views. Tap a card to watch on YouTube — no autoplay, no creep tracking, no “you might also like.”