In the winter, my living room gets pretty dry. Humidity can drop below 20%. After realizing that 40% and up is ideal for not just trading cards but people, too, I figured I’d buy a humidifier.
I went on Amazon, compared the top models in the lower to medium price range, and read their reviews. I found one people seemed happy with, ordered, and waited. After it arrived, I set it up, and it worked well enough. My living room is fairly large, so the humidifier had to run at max output, but, eventually, it made a dent. I got humidity to around 40%.
What the 4.8 rating on Amazon didn’t tell me was that this machine came with side effects. First, vapor constantly streamed from the device. It was basically a fog machine. After it ran for a while, you could see the fog hanging in the room. It made the air somewhat heavier. But if I opened a window to clear the air, guess what happened? Humidity dropped again! Then, the cycle would start over.
More annoyingly, however, the vapor actually set on furniture, items, and basically everywhere in the room. It was like a thin, milky layer of dust which crept onto the sideboard, into the holder for my Nintendo Switch, and around the plastic legs of the dining table chairs. You could wipe away the dust, but sometimes, it seemed as if a faint layer remained.
Eventually, I got worried this would cause permanent damage. And, besides, I wasn’t about to turn my living room into a hookah bar just to optimize the amount of water in the air. So, I sent it back and got a refund.
Around the same time, I remembered my dad had also bought a humidifier. I had seen it in action already, and I didn’t remember any fog emitting from the device. I asked him for the model name, and he sent it to me. Then, I set out to do a bit more research.
To my astonishment, I could barely find any information about my dad’s humidifier online. Most consumer products from large brands get hundreds of reviews on Youtube, Amazon, and various websites. This one barely had any.
One reason was that it came from a niche German manufacturer. They were specialized in humidifiers but mostly local to our geography. If your products aren’t available world wide, the crowd of folks reviewing your stuff slims down quickly.
After looking at some poorly shot videos and suspicious websites reeking of AI, I felt stuck between a rock and a hard place: Do I buy this product with barely any information on it, or do I keep complaining about my dry eyes and nose? Most other humidifiers were vapor-based, and I had at least seen this one live already. “To hell with it,” I went and hit order.
Many weeks later, I can confirm: This humidifier is amazing. It works, it self-adjusts, it has a quiet mode for at night. It makes the room livable and creates zero fog or dust residue. And I’d never have picked it off online research and reviews alone. Heck, I barely picked it after already seeing it in person! That’s how much review culture affects us these days.
It’s great that, for most products, we can access a wealth of data. It creates transparency and helps us make informed decisions. But whenever that data isn’t available, it now feels like a drawback. We suspect the worst and struggle to assess things on their merits alone. But that’s what money-back guarantees are for! If you can’t tell from afar, you can still try it for yourself.
Sometimes, the best product has no reviews. Don’t be afraid to take a chance.