Pencil Eyeliners
Liquid Eyeliners
Highlighters
Lip Foils
Eye Foils
Eyeshadows
Last year, 2025, Wet n Wild surprised us all and dropped their ‘Chameleon Chrome’ collection, which was a new set focused on shimmery and shifty sparkly pigments for the eyes, lips and face. That original drop included 4 pencil eyeliners, 2 highlighters, 2 lip foils and one eye foil (that was forgotten for the group photo oops).
And of course, the crowd went wild. I mean even the idea of drugstore multichromes?? Multichromes have long been a more expensive product, after all the pigments themselves are more expensive, so the idea that alternatives could be coming into a more affordable space was INTRIGUING.

After picking up all of those lovely little products, I took the photos of the products and the swatches and edited them up and even drafted it and then … listen, maybe it all stalled and was just sitting in my drafts for the MONTHS since then. WHOOPS. (If you’ve read any recent posts, you’ll know that the entire blog was stalled from some lack of motivation.) But thank god, these first products are still around and seem to be new permanent additions to their product line!!! So the review will still be relevant!!
As that draft was just rolling around in the back of my brain, suddenly we had a surprise again! Wet N Wild then dropped an expanded new release from this line earlier this year, with more shades in the existing products, as well as other entirely new items. This new drop included 3 liquid eyeliners, 2 new highlighter shades, 3 more lip foils, 3 more eye foils, and the most exciting to me, 6 single eyeshadows. Multichrome items in general was exciting, but MULTICHROME EYESHADOWS at the drugstore was UNPRECEDENTED. Sure, maybe we had somewhat shifty, duochrome products come and go, but never full mulitchromes! Drugstore eyeshadows had long been underwhelming, so I almost thought it couldn’t be done. I snatched them all up immediately as they became available and added it to my pile to work through.

This post is going to be a true roundup and overview, so we’ll be looking at ALL of the products in the collection, both sets of drops. I’m a fiend for Wet N Wild collections and I love to try out everything and every shade. The 2nd release pushed me to finally dust off the started draft (and the blog in general) and just get it out into the world. I do want to continue to review more makeup, and this is a good yet LONG starting point.
It’s a beefy one to read today so to help you navigate, I’ve included chapters above that’ll bounce you around to the specific product categories! From there you can scroll to swatches and initial first thoughts. I bought all of these products from Walmart – but in each section I also linked to Wet N Wild’s website listing for each individual product.
Let’s get on into these swatches!
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As mentioned I had swatched and photographed up the original products when they first released so you’ll see the first releases in swatches on their own followed up by photos of the new shades and products, and then swatches with all of the colors together.
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ALRIGHT we’re starting out with the eyeliner pencils, as these were the most exciting products to me from the first drop! Multichrome eyeliners seem to be a good first stepping stones of the affordable multichrome game, with JCat Beauty and Moira both also releasing them before this – and the Moira ones seem to receive good reviews.
There are 4 shades and they retail for $5.99 each, making them the cheapest multichrome pencil on the mainstream market, even compared to the other affordable brands I listed above. They come in a traditional plastic eyeliner tube, with packaging colors that match the main color of the eyeliner inside as well as ‘Chameleon Chrome’ printed on them.

On into the individual shades now, we have ‘Planet Disco’, a pink to gold to green multichrome; ‘Electric Prism is an icy blue base that shifts from gold to green.


‘Superstar Suit’ (I’m only hearing the voice of Frozone from The Incredible, very millennial of me) is a deep almost olive green that shifts from a teal to blue, and then ‘Cosmic Seeker’ is a brown that shifts from a gold to a pink.


Now for the swatches! These will all be under my bright direct lights, so they’ll appear as a “flatter” color in the first swatches. Shifty, multichrome effects will pop more on a more rounded surface and with movement, so I have included so many other swatches at different angles to hopefully capture a little more of the effect you would see in person.
Starting with the bottom swatching going up, first up we have ‘Planet Disco’. This is a pink to green to gold shimmer. Second from the bottom is ‘Electric Prism’, which has an icy blue base with a shift from green to gold and even pink at times. ‘Superstar Suit’ has the least amount of shift to it in this lighting, going from a teal to a deep green, with some hints of gold to it. Lastly we have ‘Cosmic Seeker’ at the top, which does end up looking very similar to ‘Planet Disco’. This one has more of a brown base than ‘Planet Disco’ but they both feature a pink to golden shift.
You can see these are more of a shimmery liner formula (maybe any multichrome formula is going to be shimmery), being almost a dense glitter packed into a pencil. They can apply more opaque on the eyes, but if you do smudge them out more, the base will sheer out and that glitter will appear more prominently. They’re not at all chunky or gritty, it’s a very smooth feel, and that glitter just gives it an extra sparkle among all of the shifts.

These pencils are incredibly smooth and just glide onto the skin without any tugging or pulling. And with that glide, it’s so easy to draw a more unique graphic shape. Any liner moments like that where the liner is more visible will obviously give you more moments of that visible shift as well. If you just draw a little wing next to the eyeline, I can’t say you’ll get as much, as it needs that surface area. (But of course nothing wrong with that if you just want to use it more for definition and a little hint of color.)
You have a tiny bit of time to smudge them after first applying if you’re looking to create a softer glitter look, but I found these do dry down more quickly and have an almost sticky middle phase before they then fully set down. If you’re waiting and then trying to smudge them out in that middle phase, they can become patchy easily, almost sticking to themselves and pulling the pigment, so I do suggest doing one eye at a time. After that sticky phase, in just a few minutes they will be fully dried down and SET. I swatched them out on my hand and I had to scrub at them with micellar water to fully get them off. These are absolutely going to stay wherever you put them (for which my oily eyelids are grateful).


Multichromes will also give you more shifts as you go throughout different lighting moments so I’m going to do my best to show you more of the magic. In a bright spotlight you’ll get more of that flat color and more of the sparkle, whereas in more indirect lighting like below you’ll get a whole different color. I pulled my arm just outside of my lightbox and these shades just FLIPPED. ‘Planet Disco’ at the bottom becomes a bright olive-gold that shifts to a golden pink; ‘Electric Prism’ is a bright icy mint green that shifts to an almost champagne gold; ‘Superstar Suit’ becomes a deep shifty blue to teal to almost purple; ‘Cosmic Seeker’ looks even closer to ‘Planet Disco’ in this lighting, being a slightly deeper more yellow toned gold to pink shift.


With any sort of multichrome liner, of course it’s going to look it’s best when I have a large swatch on my arms and I’m moving them all around and putting them into all different lighting. On your eyes, it’ll definitely depend on the roundness of your eyes and how you and where you apply them, so the effect might not be as dramatic as these swatches. I just always want to show you the possibilities while still being realistic. Make sure you like those flat, base shades too, in case the shifts are a little harder to find.
I do wish in this set that we did get a wider range of colors, with ‘Planet Disco’ and ‘Cosmic Seeker’ looking very similar. There are only 4 shades so it feels like a little bit of a wasted chance, but of course I also don’t know how hard it is to formulate other colors. Either way, I think these are a great affordable first step, and Wet N Wild does have a good pencil eyeliner formula.
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We’ll continue in the eyeliner family, next swatching up the liquid eyeliners. The 3 shades all come in this shiny shifty cardboard outer packaging, and have those same holographic mermaid scales that you’ll see all throughout this collection. These retail for $7.99 each.

Like the pencil eyeliners, the outside packaging matches the main base color of the specific liner, with a clear tube on the other end that allows you to see in and easily pick the specific shade you’re looking for.

These have a small, flexible brush tip, which is standard for their liquid eyeliners, and it can help with more swooping graphic liner looks. Although you can see sometimes it’s not the most precise, so it’ll be up to your own preferences and preferred applications really.

Now for the swatches! On top, we have ‘Turbo Dream’, with an orange coppery base that shifts to a bright gold over to a green; ‘Astro Pulse’ in the middle is a more olive green shimmery base that shifts to a bright forest green and then over to a turquoise; and then ‘Galaxy Dancer’ on the bottom is a more mauvey pink shimmer base that shifts on over to a gold and then olive green.

They can be pretty opaque in application, as long as you have enough on the brush. If you wipe off any product, I noticed there would be some skipping and patchiness. It’s thicker so it’s easier to control as you go, but it could easily get uneven and thicker with that flimsy brush. It’ll depend on your skill and eye shape.


Just like the pencil eyeliners above, it’s in more indirect lighting that those shifts will be most apparent. ‘Galaxy Dancer’ is giving the most multichrome of the 3.

Even though they’re not the same product, I did want to show the pencil eyeliners and liquid eyeliners all together. In my opinion, the pencil eyeliners are more opaque and more shifty, while the liquid eyeliners are more sparkly and give more of a punch on the eyes, but can be more uneven. There are some similar colors so you can choose between whichever specific formula you like. You don’t need to be like me and buy every single shade.
As I said with the pencil eyeliners I do wish we had more of a color range here, but thest just might be the easiest and most common multichrome color options to formulate. We’ve gotta start somewhere!

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The product that has really seems to become most popular (before the eyeshadows released) were the colorful highlighters. The people (including me) want sparkly, colored highlighters just like we had back in 2016 and these are bringing us back to SPARKLE and visible highlighters. These will NOT be subtle, let me get that out of the way in the beginning.
There are now 4 chameleon chrome highlighters and they retail for $6.99 each. Each shade comes in colored packaging that matches the shift inside with those same little holographic scales printed on the outside. It’s incredibly lightweight packaging, so it does feel a little cheaper, but it is a $7 product after all. I can look past packaging if the product inside is good.
First we have my photos of the original 2 they first released, the blue and green.

Inside, those scales are continued as an embossed pattern on the product themselves. And this is a deep embossing! It’s not going to go away with just a few uses – and on that embossing is where you get a preview of the shift of each shade – if the packaging color didn’t make it obvious.

‘Venus Swing’ has more of a white base with a bright blue shift to it, while ‘Too Sirius’ has a more translucent base with a bright warm green shift to it.


The embossing in these really helps show off those sparkles and shifts, and you can see immediately that they have a more visible and larger glitter. These are going to make a statement in the cheeks, and won’t be blending in like a “glass skin” type of highlighter.

Here are the swatches for these first 2 shades. Overall those bases are more translucent and those bright glittery shifts of color are what’s going to really shine and pop on the cheeks. ‘Venus Swing’ has a touch more of a base color showing through, with a smoother finish and smaller particle sizes overall and that icy blue shift, while ‘Too Sirius’ has a larger and more of a scattered glitter finish. In certain lighting you can even get it to shift from a lighter lilac purple to a bright olive green.

These swatches were built up on bare skin with a couple swipes of my finger, so this would be the most impactful look you can have on the cheeks. Most often you’ll be using less product and really blending it out which will give a more scattered yet still glittery look.
Even with those larger glitters, I found both of these shades to feel so incredibly smooth and lightweight. Some of the drugstore glittery highlighters (especially from other Wet N Wild collections) of the past would feel incredibly dry and more chunky and chalky, but we’ve come so far since then and these are just fantastic. They pick up so easily on the fingers or a brush and blend out so easily. Because of that lightweight formula and more sheer base, you won’t notice a weird gray cast that can sometimes come from colored highlighters. Wet n Wild has been consistently on their game when it comes to highlighters, and these are are no different.

Now for the newer two shades. Everything I noted in formula above applies for these as well.

They also of course have the same embossing.

We have ‘Solar Ember’ on the left, with a bright golden-orange shift, and then ‘Aurora Glaze’ on the right with an icy pink shift.


I made it confusing with how I positioned the packaging behind, but the orange, ‘Solar Ember’ is the top swatch while ‘Aurora Glaze’, the pink is on the bottom. (It’s been long enough between the two sets of product drops that I changed up my lighting). ‘Solar Ember’ is like ‘Venus Swing’, the blue above, and has a touch more of a visible base to it with a smoother shimmer, while ‘Aurora Glaze’ matches ‘Too Sirius’ with the more translucent base and larger glitters.


Now with these we actually get a range of colors, and I would love if they continue to release more shades, because just look how cute they all look together.


Giving you swatches of all 4 together now! From top to bottom we have ‘Solar Ember’ (orange), ‘Aurora Glaze’ (pink), ‘Too Sirius’ (green) and ‘Venus Swing’ (blue).

As I mentioned, these divide into two somewhat different formulas and it’s a little easier to see the difference when they’re all swatched together. ‘Solar Ember’ and ‘Venus Swing’ on very top and very bottom are that smoother shimmer with a little more of a base to them. Then the two inner swatches, ‘Aurora Glaze’ and ‘Too Sirius’ have a more translucent base with a more scattered and bigger shimmer to it.


You can slightly decide between two formulas and finishes, but I think once applied and blended out they’ll look very similar, and they’ll be a bold look no matter what or how little product you pick up because of that glitter and color shift.
Because they’re so affordable, you can just grab all 4 to match every mood and vibe you’ll ever have IF you like glittery highlighters. These are for a very specific preference, and you’ll be able to tell from these swatches if they’re right for you.


Okay yes we end by saying these are NOT multichromes obviously, these are very much duochrome colored eyeshadows. I would still include the in a “chrome” release and come on they’re so fun.
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These next items are a new product and formula for Wet N Wild, and they immediately had me intrigued in a different way. These are called Lip Foils and Wet n Wild promises a LOT in the descriptions of these, starting with “a groundbreaking lip color that redefines what it means to shine”. They promise full coverage, super shifty color and budge proof smooth formulas, IT’S ASKING A LOT, SO LET’S SEE HOW THEY DO. (I also won’t lie that when I first saw photos I thought these were liquid eyeshadows and was VERY excited because their past liquid eyeshadow formulas have been amazing. Alas I can only just hope for future Chameleon Chrome releases).
They retail for $5.99 each. Just like the highlighters, we had these original 2 shades from the first release and then they dropped 3 more shades in the next one.
Starting with the original two, they come in the normal chunkier clear plastic Wet N Wild lip product packaging. The caps match the main base color within, with the same holographic scales on them.

These have traditional fuzzy doe foot applicators, with a divot in the middle to pick up more product.


‘Halo’s Way’ on the bottom is a pink jelly base filled with metallic pink and gold sparkle. ‘Celestial Dance’ is a deeper brown, almost black jelly base filled with a super shifty pink to gold to green shimmer.

Now look at that SHIFT, especially for ‘Celestial Dance’ on top. It pulls fully to a bright olive green shimmer in more indirect lighting. ‘Halo’s Way’ isn’t shifting as much, but you can see golden shimmer just POPPING out in lower lighting.
I’ll quick go over the formula for all of the shades down below once I’ve swatched them all up, but even in these quick swatches, you can clearly see they’re a thicker glossy formula which makes sense for being called a “lip foil”.


Next the 3 new shades! They of course have the same packaging.


From left to right we have ‘Purple Matter’, then ‘Moonshift Bloom’ and ‘Heatwave Star’.



Here are the swatches of those 3 grouped together. ‘Purple Matter’ on top has the most sheer base of the 3 and is more of a bright fuchsia purple jelly filled with aqua blue shimmer. It feels the least “foiled” and more of just a shimmery gloss. If the look of the others intimidates you, this is a more “subtle” option that still gives a burst of glitter on the lips.
‘Moonshift Bloom’ in the middle has a more cool-toned lavender purple base that’s jam packed with a bright golden shimmer. And ‘Heatwave Star’ on the very bottom will be perfect for cooler temperatures and the fall times, being a rich almost brick red base filled with a coppery-golden shimmer.

Now for indirect lighting. ‘Purple Matter’ almost glows in this light, with that purple shimmer really coming out and looking almost “bioluminescent”. ‘Moonshift Bloom’ in the middle looks the most foiled, with the dense golden shimmer pulling almost minty green in certain angles. ‘Heatwave Star’ on the bottom is the least shifty, looking the same in color, but it still has a little glow to it from that golden shimmer.

Here are the shades all together! While we do have 5 shades now, you can see while we’re getting quite a few shimmer colors and undertones, they almost fall into 2 groups of colors. ‘Halo’s Way’ really slots right into the middle between ‘Purple Matter’ and ‘Moonshift Bloom’, while ‘Heatwave Star’ and ‘Celestial Dance’ are cousins in color and vibe. Seeing them all swatched out like this, again I’m wish for a larger range of colors, as they are running together a touch.
‘Moonshift Bloom’ and ‘Celestial Dance’ are the most foiled finishes overall, with the brightest, most metallic shimmer to them, and the most obvious shifts in different lighting and angles. ‘Heatwave Star’ is also opaque and more pigmented, though less shifty, with the shimmer blending more into the base. And ‘Purple Matter’ and ‘Halo’s Way’ are more jelly finishes with intense sparkle throughout them.

Even as soon as you pull the applicators out of the tubes, you can immediately feel that thicker formula, which would make sense with the more opaque and foiled finish that’s promised. But it also has that glossy, more jelly-like formula and stickiness to it. These truly are such an interesting formula, and it’s not really something I’ve experienced before.
Wet N Wild promises a “budge proof” formula and listen, these stay sticky for quite a long time, which makes them almost immediately lock onto the lips. That thicker formula latches on and can be hard to remove, even immediately after application (I had put on a dot of one shade, decided it didn’t match with the rest of my makeup and tried to wipe it off and only succeeded in spreading the shimmer all over my lips). I will recommend a lip liner, as with a glossy more pigmented formula like this, there’s always a risk of it traveling outside lip lines and geting a little messy. They’re sticky and you’ll get some transfer, whether to a glass or person, but there will still be pigment left on the lips. They could wear away more unevenly, and then eventually you’ll have pure sparkle left last.
If you don’t love the feeling of a thicker gloss on the lips, you absolutely won’t like these at all. You could also do a lighter application, and really spread out that shimmer and foil, but I think it might still be a little sticky. It’s a trade off for the gloss and shimmer sticking around on the lips. I do think they’re an interesting and unique formula, and they can’t be beat when it comes to the sparkle.
They’re so interesting and I am still open for more shades in the future. There seemed to be 2 more interesting colors in their ‘Fantasy Makers’ Halloween release last year, but those came and went just so fast that I wasn’t able to grab them. So bring ’em back, Wet N Wild, or just keep expanding the range. Give us some weird colors!! I want some blues and greens, a deep emerald or a navy filled with a shifting shimmer would be STUNNING.

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We keep on with the foils, this time looking at their EYESHADOW foils. These come in little pots and promise to be a super shifty, flakey formula in a self-adhering base. So not quite an eyeshadow, but a little something different.
These retail for $6.99 each and come in 4 shades. They come in plastic boxes that clearly show the product inside and they temp you in with a mesmerizing pot of magical color.

Once out of the package, each one comes in this clear little glass pot, with a silver cap. The bottom clearly shows the color, making it easy to pick up a specific shade.


Each pot also comes with these little plastic stoppers, and as it says on there, I would recommend keeping these and making sure they’re popped in tight after each use. This will help keep it the product more airtight and help the formulas last longer.

Now to show you these gorgeous little foils, of course starting with the first shade that was released, called ‘Matrix Moves’. You can get an idea of that squishy little formula inside as well looking at it like this, and you can see that it’s more textured and very shimmery.


I had to give you this shot because look at THAT. This is obviously the most fully built up, thickest application you could have, and where you’ll get the most metallic finish. So yes, if you really pack it onto your eye, yes you’ll get this finish. But come on it’s still fun to just look at.

Now here’s the REAL swatch. This product is a bright metallic purple flaked shimmer in a more clear base, that picks up and spreads out into a more scattered finish.
SO as thick and opaque it might look in the jar, this is a more scattered product overall. It’s a dense flakey shimmer within a more gel-like base, so it won’t have a fully opaque swipe right out of the pan. In my swatch, it did apply a touch more unevenly. I think this was just one quick swipe of the product, which can work for more of a topper or a scattered look, but you can see little areas of product stuck together more and were more dense. If you really make sure to apply it evenly and layer it up and pat it around, you will get a more even finish. I just want to give that disclaimer, but you’ll also see that effect in swatches later.

BUT I will say these are insanely shifty flakes. They shift from that metallic purple base to a more magenta shade, to a peachy orange and then an almost coppery shade, and all the way to the other end into a bright green. It’s a crazy shifty moment and I was just sitting there shifting my arm around and watching the colors just blend on into each other.


They are correct about calling this a foil as well, it is METALLIC. It’s so shiny and will absolutely catch the light no matter what. I could see this sort of makeup being in the Matrix universe, so it’s an accurate name.


Now with that swatch in mind, let’s add in the 3 new shades as well! More of the shifty goodness!

First we have ‘Nova Beat’. This is the one more icy, iridescent shade with flashes of minty green and bright pink.


Next is ‘Gravity Glitch’. This one is a deeper forest green flakey base with scattered moments of bright fuchsia pink.


And the 3rd is ‘Starwave’, which is a coppery flakey base with flashes of golden and green.


Okay listen, this whole time I was about to type up how these 3 have smaller flakes to them than the first one and so they can have a more opaque finish, but then I looked down at the photo of all 4 swatches together and I just swatched ‘Matrix Moves’ in a different way above. SO these can be a little finicky and can give you different applications. You can either build them to more opacity or blend them around to more scattered finish.
They can build up for a full one product look on their own, but you’ll still see your eyelid through it unless you really spackle it on, okay yes I’m done, you get it.

Anyways, even when these are in bright and not shifting as much, you still get little flecks of other colors and they give a cool effect on the eyes no mattter what.


But don’t worry, you will also get fun little shifts in more indirect lighting. ‘Nova Beat’ on top goes from that icy minty green to a bright golden, almost champagne with flashes of pink. ‘Gravity Glitch’ goes from that deeper, more warm toned forest green on over to a cooler bright green, to a teal and then slight moments of purple on the very end. And then ‘Starwave’ on the bottom goes from a warm coppery rusty red to a bright yellow gold with almost olive green moments.


They also almost glow in that more indirect lighting, with the way these still catch a sparkle, and the way they’re FOILED. You’ll absolutely will be making a statement on the eyes with these.


We now put the little family all together and add on ‘Matrix Moves’ on the bottom. With this product, now we truly do get a good range of shades with just 4 options, take notes here Wet N Wild! (And there’s also still plenty of room to add more colors, I am just saying)

Even the shifts are all very different, so I was definitely happy with the selections.


This is one product I did show applied on the eye as well, so you can get more of an idea of the look!! This is one application tapped on for a more scattered look. You can build it up even more with more product on the finger or with another layer, but I do love the effect of it sparkling with the eyelid underneath peeking out.
You can also see how much it’s still shifting around in the light coming from the window, even in a more scattered application. I’ll admit at first I was skeptical with the more flakey finish, but I’m coming around and I think these can be used in really fun looks!

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Last but certainly not least, the product I know you’re most interested in. Did you click and skip the whole post to skip my other yapping and get here first? I wouldn’t judge. Let’s talk about the single eyeshadows.
Again, the idea of affordable multichrome eyeshadows was EXCITING. I would say Clionadh’s Stained Glass eyeshadows are the most well known multichrome eyeshadow, and each of those shades retail for $17 each. (Rightfully so, I know they’re an indie brand working hard, and they have an INSANE range of colors within that multichrome finish.) These ones from Wet N Wild instead retail for $6.99 each. Am I expecting Clionadh quality for that price? Absolutely not. But again, maybe it’s a little stepping stone to try out the idea in general before you invest in more expensive brands.
I do notice 3 of the shades are out of stock on their website – I would assume they’ll be restocked but they are also available at Walmart, both online and in store.

Each shade comes in this little cardboard packaging, with the color matching the shifts of the shade inside. We have those cute little holographic scales, both on the outer packaging as well as on the top lid of the shadow itself.

For that price, I do think this is perfect packaging as well! Each one comes in thicker plastic compact, with the base matching the main color inside and a clear plastic top to easily see the shade inside. We have 3 more full color shades and then 3 icy white shades.

Now to give you some close ups of each shade!
First we have ‘Lunar Voltage’. This is one of the 3 icy white shades with a minty green-blue shift to it.

Next is ‘Moon Flare’. This one is an icy white base with a champagne golden shift.

‘Meteor Muse’ is a bright medium green.

‘Nebula Rush’ is a very warm, coppery toned pink and it’s already giving a little preview of how much it shifts just angling around the pan.


‘Starlight Fever’ is the last icy white shade and features a peachy-pink flash to it.

And ‘Comet Couture’ is the final shade, being a brown toned warm golden shade. Again, it’s already shifting around in that pan, giving little peeks of olive green.


Now for those swatches! I was absolutely MESMERIZED just looking at these swatches and this is all coming from $7 eyeshadows!!
Of course, from swatches on a large area like my arm, you’ll really see those shifts and shimmer more than you might on the eye, but I really wanted to make sure you could see the colors and finish. I’ll quick run through the shades again as they’re swatched on the arm all together. ‘Lunar Voltage’ on top is one of the icy white, more sheer shades that has a strong minty green flash; ‘Moon Flare’ has a more gray toned white base with a bright champagne gold shimmer; ‘Meteor Muse’ is a bright metallic green shade; ‘Nebula Rush’ is a more rusty coppery toned shimmery base with a berry red shimmer; ‘Starlight Fever’ is a more cooler white base filled with a bright pink shimmer; and ‘Comet Couture’ is a more brown toned metallic golden shade.

I just have to show you ever angle and 800 photos of these because I truly think they’re gorgeous, okay here we go.




Okay maybe if we’re being pedantic and nitpicky, maybe we can for sure call the two in the middle true multichromes and the others are more duochromes? I’m not the expert here someone else tell me where the line is. BUT I think either way we can agree these are STUNNING and are definitely something new and never seen in the drugstore.


Even if they’re not “full” mulitchromes, they’re insanely gorgeous shimmery eyeshadows in general, and all of them are amazing for one shadow looks!

In that indirect lighting they will shift and change, so you’ll still get a magical look on the eyes.



I also want to show the shades and pans after they’ve been swatched so you can get more of an idea of the formulas. You’ll notice that the 3 full color shades are almost squishy and putty like, with an indent in the formula itself after swatching, while the white shades are more firm like traditional eyeshadow formulas.

Especially ‘Meteor Muse’ is the squishiest of the 6, really moving around in the pan. I found that this one could skip and stick a touch if I didn’t have enough on my finger as I was applying. It can apply a little more thickly, so that can be an issue with more hooded eyelids – which I have – but I’m determined to just deal with any creasing.

‘Starlight Fever’ on the bottom there is the squishiest of the white shades, with a little more of an indent. But you can see that those full color shades can almost be flakey in moments as well, so make sure to really press as you apply. I was having a few issues picking them up on a brush, so I do prefer using my finger.

Our two icy shades are the most firm and pick up the most easily, even with a brush. I love using these shades for a subtle yet bright glitter look on plain eyelids. It just adds a little texture and intrigue for a quick out the door look.

Overall I think these shadows are STUNNING and I can only hope they’re the start of more shades to come. These are definitely the best drugstore eyeshadow formula I’ve seen, and the best formula from Wet N Wild as well. If I could recommend one product from this set, I would go for the eyeshadows, or the highlighters.
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WHEW, WE MADE IT. Thank you for anyone who actually read all the way to the end. And if you skipped around, really I don’t mind either, it was a lot of information!
To sum it all up, I think this is a really fun and exciting collection, and I didn’t have huge issues with any of the formulas. I love when drugstore companies experiment and push the envelope and work to give us these innovative concepts at a more affordable price point. Are they going to be as good as more expensive indie brands? Well of course not, but I was still really pleased with these pieces. Wet N Wild has continued to impress me and to me they’re a brand that is always trying something new, especially with their limited collections. It’s perfect to add this to their permanent line up and introduce multichromes and shifts to a new audience.
If you’re looking to experiment and bring something fun and unique to your makeup collection, this a great collection based on how affordable it all is. Are you considering picking anything up?
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Upcoming Posts
Flower Knows Bunny Garden swatches • OPI The New OPIcons Spring 2026 • Holo Taco Garden Variety collection • Mooncat Baroquen collection • OPI A Trip to the Bright Side Summer 2026
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