Ruds started using his shave score system several years ago when soaps were not nearly as good as they are today. It took a few years to even achieve a score of 95. Anything at that level includes everything that most people might "need" in a soap. Everything above that is just luxury.
Ruds has never published the criteria he uses in evaluating soaps, but three that show up in his videos are: primary slickness, residual slickness, and post shave feel.
The problem is that once you score a soap 100, what do you do if you now get an even better soap? Do you go back and knock off five points from all the previous scores to provide room for even better soaps. That would make the soapmakers furious. Ruds chose to open up the top end.
When I first tried Grooming Department Nai (Aion scent), it was so good that I predicted Ruds would give it a score of 100. When he evaluated the soap, that is exactly how he scored it. When Mohammad told me he knew how to make Nai even better, I was skeptical formula; I was wrong. Mo has made changes to the Nai formula that have made it even better than the original. Since the original Nai got a score of 100, how should the new, improved version be scored? We will have to see.
There was a time when in track and field, breaking running a mile in under 4 minutes was considered impossible. Since Roger Bannister ran a mile in 3 minutes 59.4 seconds, this unbreakable barrier has been broken multiple times. I predict that there will be several 100+ soaps in the coming year. However, producing 100+ quality soaps often requires the use of premium ingredients that are more costly. A few years ago, the typical price for soaps was about $4 per ounce. Now, some soaps like Nai are selling for $8 per ounce. Will shavers will willing to pay even more for just a little more luxury?
Ruds has never published the criteria he uses in evaluating soaps, but three that show up in his videos are: primary slickness, residual slickness, and post shave feel.
The problem is that once you score a soap 100, what do you do if you now get an even better soap? Do you go back and knock off five points from all the previous scores to provide room for even better soaps. That would make the soapmakers furious. Ruds chose to open up the top end.
When I first tried Grooming Department Nai (Aion scent), it was so good that I predicted Ruds would give it a score of 100. When he evaluated the soap, that is exactly how he scored it. When Mohammad told me he knew how to make Nai even better, I was skeptical formula; I was wrong. Mo has made changes to the Nai formula that have made it even better than the original. Since the original Nai got a score of 100, how should the new, improved version be scored? We will have to see.
There was a time when in track and field, breaking running a mile in under 4 minutes was considered impossible. Since Roger Bannister ran a mile in 3 minutes 59.4 seconds, this unbreakable barrier has been broken multiple times. I predict that there will be several 100+ soaps in the coming year. However, producing 100+ quality soaps often requires the use of premium ingredients that are more costly. A few years ago, the typical price for soaps was about $4 per ounce. Now, some soaps like Nai are selling for $8 per ounce. Will shavers will willing to pay even more for just a little more luxury?