Reese’s Puffs didn’t invent peanut butter cereal. It just made every other version feel like an apology.
The opening bite
The puffs are dense. Edges sharper than you’d expect from something that looks this friendly — eat too fast and you’ll catch a gum nick within the first bowl. Slow down. Crunch is immediate, loud, and holds across the first two minutes without softening. Flavor payload lands on first chew: peanut butter punches first, chocolate follows right behind it. Both earn their place. This is what the category is supposed to taste like.
The milk situation
The milk transformation is real but measured. By the ~3-minute mark, the milk picks up peanut butter notes and a whisper of chocolate — not the Reese’s milkshake the flavor payload implies. Lightly flavored milk is the honest description. Bowl longevity is the stronger story: puffs hold crunch for ~9 minutes, which is elite for this format. The bowl is god-tier. The milk is merely solid.
Where it loses points
The milk situation is the one real charge. Reese’s Puffs promises a liquid Reese’s cup and delivers lightly flavored milk. Not bad. Just not the milkshake you were expecting when you poured the bowl. The gap between what the flavor payload suggests and what ends up in your glass is the only thing keeping this out of perfect territory.
Milk Takes
“The milk remembers peanut butter. The chocolate didn’t make the trip.”
The verdict
At 9.1, this earns a Hall of Crunch designation — the benchmark by which every other peanut butter cereal gets measured. The dry snackability seals it. BUY THE BOX. EAT DRY.
The verdict
BUY THE BOX. EAT DRY.