Allylescaline produces 42 documented subjective effects across 6 categories.
Full Allylescaline profileThe onset is characteristically slow, unfolding over sixty to ninety minutes with a gradually building warmth that begins in the stomach and radiates outward through the body. There is a groundedness to the come-up that immediately distinguishes allylescaline from the sharper, more synthetic-feeling phenethylamines. The energy is earthy and organic, settling into the body like sunlight warming stone. Mild gastrointestinal awareness may be present but rarely develops into troublesome nausea. Colors begin to shift almost imperceptibly, acquiring a golden, sunlit quality that makes the ordinary world look as though it has been photographed during the last hour before sunset.
By the two-hour mark, the visual effects have established themselves as a gentle but unmistakable psychedelic enhancement. Colors are deeply saturated in warm, natural tones -- ochres, sage greens, terracottas, and the rich amber of late-afternoon light. Surfaces breathe slowly and rhythmically, as though the world is gently respiring. Textures reveal extraordinary detail: the grain of wood becomes a landscape, the surface of a leaf unfolds into fractal complexity, and natural forms seem to express a mathematical beauty that is normally hidden beneath the brain's filters of familiarity. The visual geometry is soft, organic, and flowing -- spirals, waves, and rounded forms that feel distinctly mescaline-adjacent, echoing the aesthetics of the parent compound without quite reaching its depth.
The headspace is calm, clear, and gently expansive. There is a philosophical quality to the thoughts that arise -- a tendency toward quiet contemplation of nature, beauty, and connectedness. The mind feels unhurried and spacious, with none of the frantic branching or analytical intensity of substances like 2C-E. Emotional warmth is present but gentle, manifesting as a quiet gratitude and a softened appreciation for the present moment. Music is beautifully enhanced, acquiring a depth and resonance that rewards careful listening. The body feels comfortable, warm, and grounded -- there is a sense of being held by the earth, of belonging to the physical world in a way that is simultaneously ordinary and profound.
The duration is long, spanning eight to twelve hours with a slow, gradual arc that never spikes into overwhelming intensity. The descent is smooth and leisurely, with effects fading gently over the final hours. The aftermath is clean and often includes a lingering afterglow of visual sensitivity and emotional openness. Allylescaline offers a mescaline-like experience with reduced intensity and fewer demands -- a long, gentle walk through a psychedelic landscape that never requires running.
A noticeable acceleration of heartbeat that can range from a subtle awareness of one's pulse to a forceful, rapid pounding felt throughout the chest, neck, and temples. This effect is among the most commonly reported physiological responses to psychoactive substances and often accompanies stimulation, anxiety, or physical exertion during intoxication.
Increased libidoA marked enhancement of sexual desire, arousal, and sensitivity to erotic stimuli that can range from a gentle heightening of romantic interest to an overwhelming, all-consuming preoccupation with sexual thoughts and physical intimacy. This effect often co-occurs with tactile enhancement and empathy, creating a distinctly sensual state of consciousness.
Muscle crampMuscle cramps are sudden, involuntary, and often painful contractions of muscles that occur as a side effect of certain psychoactive substances, particularly stimulating psychedelics and stimulants.
NauseaAn uncomfortable sensation of queasiness and stomach discomfort that may or may not lead to vomiting, often occurring during the onset phase of many substances.
Physical euphoriaAn intensely pleasurable bodily sensation that can manifest as waves of warmth, tingling electricity, or a full-body orgasmic glow radiating outward from the core. This effect is often described as one of the most rewarding physical sensations available through psychoactive substances and is a primary driver of the recreational appeal of many substance classes.
Pupil dilationA visible enlargement of the pupil diameter (mydriasis) that can range from subtle widening to dramatic saucer-like expansion where the dark pupil dominates the iris. This effect is one of the most recognizable signs of psychedelic and stimulant intoxication and directly contributes to light sensitivity, enhanced color perception, and the characteristic "wide-eyed" appearance.
SedationA state of deep physical and mental calming that manifests as a progressive desire to remain still, lie down, and eventually drift toward sleep. Sedation ranges from a gentle drowsy relaxation to a heavy, irresistible pull into unconsciousness where maintaining wakefulness becomes a losing battle against the body's insistence on shutdown.
StimulationA state of heightened physical and mental energy characterized by increased wakefulness, elevated motivation, and a subjective sense of vigor that pervades both body and mind. Users often report feeling electrically alive, with a buzzing readiness to move, talk, and engage that can range from a pleasant caffeine-like lift to an overwhelming, jittery compulsion to act.
Unprompted physical sensations that arise without external touch or stimulus, manifesting as tingling, buzzing, warmth, electricity, or pressure that moves across or through the body in waves, pulses, or sustained patterns.
Tactile enhancementThe sense of touch becomes dramatically heightened, making physical contact feel intensely pleasurable and detailed. Textures and skin contact produce amplified richness.
A visual phenomenon in which a faint, ghostly imprint of a previously viewed image persists in the visual field after the original stimulus has been removed or one has looked away. These lingering visual echoes are significantly more persistent, vivid, and detailed than normal physiological afterimages, often retaining color and form for several seconds or longer and overlaying themselves onto whatever one currently views.
Brightness alterationPerceived increase or decrease in environmental brightness beyond actual illumination levels, common with stimulants and psychedelics (brightening) or sedatives (darkening).
Colour enhancementAn intensification of the brightness, vividness, and saturation of colors in the external environment, making the world appear dramatically more colorful. Reds seem redder, greens seem greener, and all hues appear richer and more distinct than during ordinary perception.
Colour shiftingThe visual experience of colors on objects and surfaces cycling through continuous, fluid transformations, shifting from one hue to another in smooth, seamless loops. A green surface might flow through blue, purple, red, and back to green in a mesmerizing animated sequence.
Depth perception distortionsAlterations in how the distance of objects within the visual field is perceived, causing layers of scenery to appear exaggerated, rearranged, flattened, or warped in spatial depth.
DiffractionThe experience of seeing rainbow-like spectrums of color and prismatic halos embedded within bright light sources and reflective surfaces, caused by pupil dilation altering how light enters the eye.
DriftingThe visual experience of perceiving stationary objects, textures, and surfaces as appearing to flow, breathe, melt, or shift in position. Drifting is one of the most fundamental and commonly reported visual distortions under the influence of psychedelic substances, serving as the perceptual foundation upon which many other visual effects are built. It manifests as a fluid, organic sense of motion embedded in otherwise static visual fields.
GeometryThe experience of perceiving complex, ever-shifting geometric patterns superimposed over the visual field or visible behind closed eyelids. Geometry is widely considered the hallmark visual effect of psychedelic substances, ranging from simple lattice patterns and honeycombs at low doses to infinitely complex, self-transforming fractal structures at high doses that can feel profoundly meaningful and awe-inspiring.
Internal hallucinationVivid, detailed visual experiences perceived within an imagined mental landscape that can only be seen with closed eyes, ranging from fleeting imagery and abstract scenes to fully immersive, dream-like environments with autonomous narratives and entities.
Pattern recognition enhancementAn increased ability and tendency to perceive meaningful patterns, faces, and images within ambiguous or random visual stimuli such as textures, clouds, and surfaces.
Perspective distortionsDistortion of perceived depth, distance, and size of real objects, making things appear closer, further, larger, or smaller than they actually are.
Perspective hallucinationA hallucinatory phenomenon in which the observer's visual perspective shifts from the normal first-person viewpoint to alternative vantage points — including third-person (seeing oneself from outside), bird's-eye, or omniscient perspectives — during both internal and external hallucinations.
Settings, sceneries, and landscapesThe perceived environment in which hallucinatory experiences take place, ranging from recognizable locations drawn from memory to entirely novel alien landscapes, ancient civilizations, cosmic vistas, and impossible architectural spaces.
Symmetrical texture repetitionTextures appear to mirror and tessellate across surfaces in intricate, self-similar symmetrical patterns that maintain detail at every scale. Most prominent in peripheral vision on rough surfaces.
TracersMoving objects leave visible trails of varying length and opacity behind them, similar to long-exposure photography. Trails may match the object color or appear in other hues.
TransformationsObjects and scenery undergo perceived visual metamorphosis, smoothly shapeshifting into other recognizable forms over seconds. Patterns morph into faces, animals, and imagery.
Visual acuity enhancementVision becomes sharper and more defined than normal, as though a slightly blurry lens has been brought into perfect focus. Edges appear crisp and fine details become vivid.
Intense feelings of apprehension, worry, and dread that can range from a subtle background unease to overwhelming panic attacks with a sense of impending doom, often amplified by the substance's intensification of one's existing mental state.
Autonomous voice communicationAutonomous voice communication is the experience of hearing and engaging in conversation with one or more internal voices that feel genuinely independent from one's own thoughts — capable of expressing novel ideas, holding opinions the person does not share, and carrying on complex dialogue that feels unscripted and spontaneous.
Cognitive euphoriaA cognitive and emotional state of intense well-being, elation, happiness, and joy that manifests as a profound mental contentment and positive outlook. This ranges from gentle feelings of optimism and warmth to overwhelming bliss that pervades all thoughts and perceptions.
Conceptual thinkingA shift in the nature of thought from verbal, linear sentence structures to intuitive, non-linguistic concepts that are felt and understood rather than spoken by an internal narrator.
DelusionA delusion is a fixed, false belief that is held with unshakeable certainty and is impervious to contradicting evidence or rational argument — often involving grandiose, persecutory, or bizarre themes that are clearly at odds with observable reality.
Immersion enhancementA heightened capacity to become fully absorbed and engrossed in external media such as music, films, video games, and art, with an amplified suspension of disbelief and a deepened emotional connection to the content being experienced.
Memory suppressionA dose-dependent inhibition of one's ability to access and utilize short-term and long-term memory, ranging from mild forgetfulness to a profound inability to recall personal identity, biographical information, or the context of the current experience.
Novelty enhancementA feeling of increased fascination, awe, and childlike wonder attributed to everyday concepts, objects, and experiences, as if perceiving the world for the first time.
Personal bias suppressionA decrease in the personal, cultural, and cognitive biases through which one normally filters their perception, enabling more objective self-examination and worldview analysis.
PsychosisPsychosis is a serious psychiatric state involving a fundamental break from consensus reality — characterized by firmly held false beliefs (delusions), perception of things that are not there (hallucinations), disorganized thought and speech, and a loss of the ability to distinguish internal mental events from external reality.
Thought loopsBecoming trapped in a repeating cycle of thoughts, actions, and emotions that loops every few seconds to minutes. Short-term memory lapses cause the sequence to restart.
Time distortionSubjective perception of time becomes dramatically altered — minutes may feel like hours, or hours pass in moments. Can manifest as either dilation or compression.
A profound dissolution of the sense of self in which personal identity, memories, and the boundary between self and world completely vanish, leaving only pure undifferentiated awareness.
Unity and interconnectednessA profound sense that identity extends beyond the self to encompass other people, nature, or all of existence. Boundaries between self and other dissolve into felt oneness.
Allylescaline can produce 10 physical effects including spontaneous tactile sensations, increased heart rate, tactile enhancement, physical euphoria, and 6 more.
Yes. Allylescaline can produce 17 visual effects including settings, sceneries, and landscapes, pattern recognition enhancement, symmetrical texture repetition, depth perception distortions, and 13 more.
Allylescaline produces 12 cognitive effects including personal bias suppression, immersion enhancement, novelty enhancement, conceptual thinking, and 8 more.