List of Pepsi variations
Appearance
(Redirected from Pepsi edge)
This article needs additional citations for verification. (February 2013) |
PepsiCo has produced a number of variations on its primary cola, Pepsi, over the years, including the following:
Regular varieties
[edit]North America
[edit]This section needs additional citations for verification. (October 2015) |
Name | Launched | Notes |
---|---|---|
Pepsi | 1898 1961 |
PepsiCo's signature cola product. It has been released in its current form since 1961. |
Caffeine-Free Pepsi | 1982 | Pepsi without the caffeine. It was first introduced in 1982 as Pepsi Free but was changed to its current name in 1987. |
Pepsi Wild Cherry | 1988 | Pepsi with cherry flavoring. It was known under the slightly different name of Wild Cherry Pepsi until 2005. It is available in the United States, Canada, and Russia. |
Pepsi AM | 1989 | A variant of Pepsi that contained 25% extra caffeine and was marketed as a morning drink. It was introduced in test markets in August 1989, but was discontinued in October 1990 due to poor sales and reception.[1] |
Pepsi Raging Razzberry | 1991 | Pepsi with raspberry flavoring. It was released as part of the "Pepsi Wild Bunch" - A range of flavored colas test-marketed in the United States from February–April 1991.[2] The soda was said to taste like a burst of raspberry rather than an actual raspberry flavor. |
Pepsi Strawberry Burst | 1991 | Pepsi with strawberry flavoring. It was released as part of the "Pepsi Wild Bunch" - A range of flavored colas test-marketed in the United States from February–April 1991.[2] |
Pepsi Tropical Chill | 1991 | Pepsi with orange/pineapple tropical mix flavoring. It was released as part of the "Pepsi Wild Bunch" - A range of flavored colas test-marketed in the United States from February–April 1991.[2] |
Crystal Pepsi | 1992 | A clear cola that was sold for a short time between 1992 and 1993. It returned in 2015 as part of a limited sweepstakes promotion and has been re-released several times since. |
Crystal (from the makers of Pepsi) | 1994 | A clear citrus/cola hybrid cola that was sold for a short time in 1994 until the end of the year.[3] |
Pepsi Kona | 1996 | Pepsi with coffee flavoring. It was test-marketed in Philadelphia during May 1996 until 1997, which due to low sales never led to a full release. |
Pepsi Candy | 1999 | Pepsi with fruity sweet flavoring. It was sold in Canada in spring 1999. |
Pepsi Twist | 2000 | Pepsi with lemon flavoring. It was first released in 2000, and was discontinued in 2006. It is still sold in many countries outside the United States. It was re-released as Pepsi NFL Kickoff in 2008 to promote the NFL kickoffs. |
Pepsi Blue | 2002 | A blue-colored, fruity/berry-flavored soda which is described as a "Berry Cola Fusion" in marketing. It was given a huge marketing push akin to other similar varieties of rival brands (e.g., Vanilla Coke, Dr Pepper Red Fusion), but would end up being a huge flop, being discontinued in 2004. It is still available in some countries and was re-released in the United States for the summer of 2021 for a limited time. |
Pepsi Vanilla | 2003 | Pepsi with vanilla flavoring. It was released in the US and Canada in 2003 as Pepsi's answer to Vanilla Coke.[4] It was eventually discontinued by 2005, but was relaunched in 2019 and is still available in some parts of the US. It is also available in Hungary. |
Pepsi Lime | 2004 | Pepsi with lime flavoring. It was introduced in 2004 and was discontinued by 2006. It was later re-released as a standard limited edition variety for the spring of 2019, but was later re-released permanently. It was also available in the Philippines. |
Pepsi Holiday Spice | 2004 | Pepsi with a cinnamon finish, somewhat similar to the Swedish Julmust. It was released on 1 November 2004 in the US and Canada as a limited edition, 8-week-long Christmas variety. It was sold again during the 2006 holiday season. It was later responded that there will be no more plans to return this flavor to the markets in the near future.[5] |
Pepsi Summer Mix | 2007 | Pepsi with tropical Fruit flavoring. It was released for the summer of 2007 in limited areas of the United States. It was a big hit for the northeastern United States. |
Pepsi Natural | 2009 | Pepsi with natural ingredients and flavoring, and is sweetened with sugar instead of high-fructose corn syrup. It is the US equivalent to Pepsi Raw. It was released in 2009 and was discontinued in 2011 due to poor sales. |
Pepsi-Cola Soda Shop | 2009 | A version of Pepsi-Cola that is sweetened with sugar instead of high-fructose corn syrup and lacking citric acid. It was first introduced as Pepsi Throwback in May 2009 as a limited edition and was sold again throughout 2010–2011, until becoming permanent. It was rebranded to Pepsi-Cola Made with Real Sugar in June 2014, and has been rebranded again to Pepsi-Cola Soda Shop Made with Real Sugar in early 2024 to fit in with PepsiCo's Soda Shop series of sugar-sweetened cola. |
Pepsi Cherry Vanilla | 2010 | Pepsi with cherry vanilla flavoring. It was released for the summer of 2010 for eight weeks, and was re-released in February 2016 for Valentines Day. |
Pepsi X | 2012 | Pepsi with dragonfruit flavoring. It was released as a limited edition in the fall of 2012 to promote the second season of the US version of The X Factor. It was sweetened with a blend of corn syrup, Acesulfame Potassium, and Sucralose. |
Pepsi-Cola Made with Real Sugar Vanilla | 2014 | Pepsi with vanilla flavoring. It is a sugar-sweetened version of Pepsi Vanilla, and was released for the summer of 2014 as a limited edition. |
Pepsi-Cola Made with Real Sugar Cherry | 2014 | Pepsi with cherry flavoring. It is a sugar-sweetened version of Pepsi Wild Cherry, and was released for the summer of 2014 as a limited edition. |
Pepsi Ginger | 2016 | A variety that blended cola with Ginger Ale. It was sold in Canada for a short time from April 2016[6] and became well known during the time it was sold for its strong ginger taste. |
Pepsi 1893 Original Cola | 2016 | A discontinued variant on the original Pepsi with a combination of kola nuts, sugar, and sparkling water. It was released as part of the Pepsi 1893 line, which features variants on the original Pepsi formulation by Caleb Bradham.[7] |
Pepsi 1893 Ginger Cola | 2016 | A discontinued Pepsi 1893 variant with ginger flavoring.[7] It is also sold in Canada as Pepsi Ginger Cola. |
Pepsi 1893 Black Currant Cola | 2017 | Pepsi 1893 variant with currant and berry flavoring. It was soft launched in February 2017, but was discontinued at the end of the year.[8] |
Pepsi 1893 Citrus Cola | 2017 | Pepsi 1893 variant with grapefruit flavoring. It was soft-launched in February 2017, but was discontinued at the end of the year.[8] |
Pepsi Fire | 2017 | Pepsi with cinnamon infusion. It was sold for a limited time in the summer of 2017. |
Pepsi Salted Caramel | 2017 | Pepsi with caramel flavoring. It was sold from November 2017 to the end of the year for the holiday season. |
Pepsi Berry | 2019 | Pepsi with berry flavoring. It was first sold as a standard limited edition variety in spring 2019. later, it was released permanently. |
Pepsi Mango | 2019 | Pepsi with mango flavoring. It was first sold as a standard limited edition variety in spring 2019. later, it was released permanently. |
Pepsi Pineapple | 2019 | Pepsi with pineapple flavoring. It was released in the spring of 2019, as a limited edition available exclusively at Walmart stores, and returned for a limited time in the Summer of 2023 as part of a promotion exclusively with Little Caesars. It returned as a Little Caesars exclusive again in the summer of 2024 in 20-ounce bottles rather than in cans. |
Pepsi Apple Pie | 2020 | Pepsi with artificial cinnamon and apple flavoring. It was available as part of a social media contest in 2020. |
Pepsi Hot Chocolate | 2021 | Pepsi with hot chocolate flavoring. It was given out as a limited edition to people who participated on National Hot Chocolate Day using the #nationalhotchocolateday and #pepsioffer on January 31, 2021. Only 2000 cans of this flavor are known to exist. This soda is said to taste like the classic American chocolate cola (putting chocolate syrup in cola) but with a mild liquorice taste.[9] |
Pepsi Peeps | 2021 | Pepsi with marshmallow flavoring. It was released as a limited edition sweepstakes in collaboration with Peeps marshmallow treats for the 2021 Easter season.[10] In February 2023, it was re-released in stores for a limited time. |
Pepsi-Cola Soda Shop Cream Soda | 2021 | Pepsi with cream soda flavoring. It was released as part of the Pepsi Soda Shop series of sugar-sweetened colas as a limited edition from September 2021.[11] The drink was made available for a limited time again in November 2022. |
Pepsi-Cola Soda Shop Black Cherry | 2021 | Pepsi with black cherry flavoring. It was released as part of the Pepsi Soda Shop series of sugar-sweetened colas as a limited edition from September 2021.[11] The drink was made available for a limited time again in November 2022. |
Nitro Pepsi Original Cola | 2022 | Nitrogen-infused version of Pepsi released in March 2022.[12] |
Nitro Pepsi Vanilla | 2022 | Nitrogen-infused version of Pepsi with vanilla flavoring released in March 2022.[12] |
Pepsi Maple Syrup | 2022 | A Maple Syrup flavored Pepsi released as part of a limited edition sweepstakes with IHOP Maple Syrup in March 2022. It was released again for a limited time in April 2024 as an IHOP exclusive in the form of a fountain drink or as an ice cream float. |
Pepsi S'mores Toasty Marshmallow | 2022 | Pepsi with artificial marshmallow flavoring. It was available as a limited edition for the 2022 holiday season. |
Pepsi S'mores Chocolate | 2022 | Pepsi with chocolate flavoring. It was available as a limited edition for the 2022 holiday season. |
Pepsi S'mores Graham Cracker | 2022 | Pepsi with artificial Graham Cracker flavoring. It was available as a limited edition for the 2022 holiday season. |
Pepsi Peach | 2024 | Pepsi with Peach flavoring. Released on April 22, 2024 along with the return of Pepsi Lime. |
Pepsi Wild Cherries and Cream | 2025 | Pepsi with cherry and vanilla cream flavoring tentatively set to be released in January 2025 along with a zero sugar version. |
Pepsi Floats | 2025 | An ice cream float Pepsi flavor tentatively set to be released some time in 2025 as part of a new Floats series of PepsiCo beverages, including Pepsi Floats, Mtn Dew Floats, and Mug Root Beer Floats. |
Europe
[edit]This section needs additional citations for verification. (October 2015) |
Name | Launched | Notes |
---|---|---|
Pepsi Chill | 1993 | A Cherry-flavored variant sold in Australia as a limited edition for the summer. |
Pepsi Slam | 1993 | A Strawberry-flavored variant sold in Australia as a limited edition for the summer. |
Pepsi Rage | 1993 | A Raspberry-flavored variant sold in Australia as a limited edition for the summer. |
Pepsi Punch | 1994 | A sweet coconut and fruit punch-flavored variant. It was sold in the UK and France for a short amount of time in 1994. |
Pepsi Strawberry | 1994 | A strawberry-flavored variant. It was sold in the UK and France for a short amount of time in 1994. |
Pepsi Tropical | 1994 | A pineapple and sweet orange-flavored variant. It was sold in the UK and France for a short amount of time in 1994. |
Pepsi Peach | 1996 | A sweet peach-flavored variant with a hint of cream soda. It was sold in Portugal in 1996 and was discontinued shortly after due to low sales. |
Pepsi Boom | 1997 | A repackaging of Caffeine Free Pepsi aimed at the child demographic. It was sold in Germany, Italy, and Spain until 2019, when it was rebranded under the standard Caffeine Free Pepsi name. It was also sold in France as Pepsi Cool from 1997 until being discontinued in the country in 2003. |
Pepsi La Liga | 2000 | A kola-flavored variant that was sold as a limited edition in Spain to promote La Liga in 2000. |
Pepsi Blue | 2000s | A blue-colored, fruity/berry-flavored variant. It has been sold in countries such as Bulgaria, Denmark, Finland, Italy, Romania, Hungary, and Turkey. |
Pepsi Cappuccino | 2000s | A coffee-flavored variant. It was sold in Russia, Romania, and other various parts of Europe during the 2000s. It is also known as Pepsi Café Chino.[13] |
Pepsi X Energy Cola | 2004 | An energy drink variant that contained extra caffeine, a unique flavor, and a reddish tint. It was first test-marketed in the Netherlands[14] before being available in several countries such as Russia, Sweden, Denmark, Vietnam, and Brazil. |
Pepsi Ice Cream | 2005 | A vanilla-flavored variant that was sold in Russia. It reportedly tasted like cream soda.[15] |
Pepsi Samba | 2005 | A tropical fruit-flavored variant containing the flavors mango and tamarind. It was released in Australia as a limited edition for 2005. |
Pepsi Clear | 2005 | A clear-colored variant that was released in Mexico as a limited edition for the Christmas season in 2005. It is the Mexican equivalent of Crystal Pepsi. |
Pepsi Gold | 2006 | A ginger-hinted, gold-colored variant that was released for 2006 FIFA World Cup and ICC Cricket World Cup 2007 promotions in Southeast Asia, Central Europe, Finland, Russia, Turkey, and the Middle East. For the 2010 FIFA World Cup, the drink was re-released as Pepsi Cheer. |
Pepsi Summer Chill | 2007 | An apple-flavored variant that was sold in Poland as a limited edition for the summer of 2007. In the Czech Republic and Slovakia, it was sold as Pepsi Ice. |
Pepsi Fresh | 2007 | A fresh-cola variant that was sold for the summers of 2007 and 2008 in Russia. |
Pepsi Raw | 2008 | A variant made with all-natural ingredients and no artificial colours. It was first sold in the UK in 2008, but was withdrawn from the market in September 2010.[16] |
Pepsi Jaffa | 2009 | An orange-flavored variant that was available for short time in the Netherlands and the North of Belgium, in restaurants and cafes in 2009. It was only available as a fountain drink. |
Pepsi Mojito | 2009 | An alcohol-free, lemon-mint variant. It was sold in Italy as a limited edition for the summer of 2009. |
Pepsi Ginga | 2014 | A citrus-flavored variant inspired by Brazilian culture. It was sold as a limited summer edition for 2014 in Romania and Denmark. |
Pepsi Lime Mint | 2021 | A lime and mint-flavored variant available in Poland, Estonia and Finland since 2021. |
Pepsi Pineapple Mint | 2022 | A pineapple and mint-flavored variant released in the Czech Republic and Romania during the summer of 2022. |
Japan
[edit]Name | Launched | Notes |
---|---|---|
Pepsi Carnival | 2006 | A tropical fruit-flavored Pepsi available in Japan for a limited time that debuted in summer 2006. The same concept was later released as Pepsi Summer Mix in 2007 in the US, although the formula was most likely different. |
Pepsi Red | 2006 | Released alongside Pepsi Gold in November 2006, this variant had a somewhat spicy ginger flavor. |
Pepsi Gold | 2006 | Released alongside Pepsi Red in November 2006, this variant had a mild ginger flavor. |
Pepsi Ice Cucumber | 2007 | A limited edition green, cucumber-flavored Pepsi sold in summer 2007.[17] |
Pepsi Blue Hawaii | 2008 | A summer 2008 limited edition, pineapple and lemon-flavored Pepsi, blue in color.[18] |
Pepsi White | 2008 | A limited edition variant with yogurt flavor, sold in winter 2008.[19] It was released again for a limited time in winter 2012 with a mandarin orange flavor.[20] Another variant called White Cola Pepsi was released in 2015, with a light citrus flavor similar to the 2012 version.[21] |
Pepsi Shiso | 2009 | A limited edition green shiso-flavored soda sold during summer 2009.[22] |
Pepsi Azuki | 2009 | An azuki bean-flavored limited edition Pepsi released on October 20, 2009.[23] |
Pepsi Baobab | 2010 | A baobab tree fruit-flavored, limited edition Pepsi released on May 25, 2010.[24] |
Pepsi Strong Shot | 2010 | A limited edition Pepsi released in 2010 with a high concentration of caffeine and extra carbonation. Followed up on in 2015 with Pepsi Strong and Pepsi Strong Zero. These were sold in larger sizes and with an even higher concentration of caffeine and carbonation.[25] This was further followed up on in May 2016 with Pepsi Strong 5.0 GV, a soda so carbonated that a new bottle had to be designed to contain it.[26] |
Pepsi Mont Blanc | 2010 | A limited edition Pepsi based on the French chestnut dessert. Sold for a limited time from October 2010.[27] |
Pepsi Dry | 2011 | A limited edition non-sweet (but not completely sugar-free) bitter Pepsi variant released by Suntory on May 24, 2011.[28] |
Pepsi Caribbean Gold | 2011 | A limited edition, golden-colored, white sapote fruit-flavored Pepsi released on July 26, 2011.[29] |
Pepsi Pink | 2011 | A limited edition pink, strawberry milk-flavored Pepsi released on November 8, 2011, for a limited time.[30] It was released again in 2014.[31] |
Pepsi Black | 2012 | A soda similar to Pepsi Dry, with 50% less sugar than regular Pepsi, and blacker in color, released in summer 2012, by Suntory. |
Pepsi Extra | 2012 | A caffeinated variant of Pepsi sold in 200 ml cans in summer 2012. The same concept was later released in 2019 as Pepsi Refresh Shot. |
Pepsi Salty Watermelon | 2012 | A watermelon flavored Pepsi, sold in Japan in June 2012 for a limited time only. |
Pepsi Special | 2012 | Contains an ingredient to limit the absorption of fat. Sold in June 2012. |
Pepsi Special Lemon Mint | 2015 | A limited edition Pepsi released in the summer of 2015. It was a zero calorie soda touted to meet the Food for Specified Health Uses (FOSHU) standards.[32] |
Pepsi Ghost | 2015 | Released on October 6, 2015. The bottles featured Halloween themed labels, while the flavor was an unidentified mystery flavor.[33] |
Pepsi Sakura | 2016 | A floral cherry blossom flavored Pepsi, released in March 2016.[34] |
Pepsi Christmas Cola | 2017 | A limited edition, Christmas-themed Pepsi released November 21, 2017. While not cake batter-flavored, the creamy white cola and strawberry combination is reminiscent of the whipped cream and strawberries of a traditional Japanese Christmas cake.[35] |
Pepsi Halloween Cola | 2017 | Released in October 2017, this "mystery" flavor was pink, with a sweet cherry and bubblegum flavor. It also somewhat resembled past Sakura-flavored Pepsi.[36] |
Pepsi Orange | 2020 | An orange-flavored Pepsi variant, released in 2020.[37] |
Pepsi Caramel Punch | 2020 | A limited edition caramel-flavored Pepsi, released on October 20, 2020.[38] |
Pepsi Karaage Senyo Cola | 2022 | Pepsi variant made to be enjoyed along Karaage fried chicken, released on June 9, 2022.[39] |
China
[edit]Name | Launched | Notes |
---|---|---|
Pepsi Sweet Osmanthus | 2020 | Pepsi with sweet osmanthus flower flavoring, launched in 2020. |
Pepsi White Peach and Oolong | 2021 | Pepsi with white peach and Oolong tea flavoring, launched in 2021. |
Pepsi Banpeiyu and Green Bamboo | 2022 | Pepsi with banpeiyu and bamboo flavoring, launched in 2022. |
Latin America
[edit]Name | Launched | Notes |
---|---|---|
Pepsi Limón | 2002 | Pepsi with lemon flavor released in Mexico in 2002, later returned as Pepsi Twist in 2004. No longer produced. |
Pepsi Twistão | 2003 | Sold during summertime in Brazil, it is a Pepsi variant with a lemon flavor stronger than regular Pepsi Twist. "Twistão", in Portuguese, is the augmentative of "Twist". |
Pepsi Capuchino | 2006 | A blend of cola with mocha-latte coffee flavor. Released for a limited time in Guatemala[40] and El Salvador[41] in 2006 in 600 ml (20 US fl oz) bottles. Later introduced in Honduras in 2012. |
Pepsi Retro | 2008 | Released in Mexico in February 2008. Pepsi made with natural ingredients, sugar cane, and cola nut extract. |
Pecsi | 2009 | Pepsi spelled differently as "Pecsi". Produced in Argentina in 2009[42] and Mexico in 2011.[43] |
Pepsi Kaffe | 2000s | One of a number of coffee-flavored Pepsi variants introduced outside the US throughout the 2000s[44] |
Other markets
[edit]- Pepsi Blue Chilled Cola, or simply Pepsi Blue, which was promoted by Britney Spears was released in Vietnam. Another version of Pepsi, Pepsi Ice Mint flavored Pepsi sold for a limited time along with Pepsi Fire in south east Asia including Malaysia.
- Pepsi Cheer, a sweet syrup tasting style of Pepsi sold in Thailand in 2010.
- Pepsi Fire: a limited edition, cinnamon-flavored variety that is sold in Guam, Saipan, Thailand, Mexico, Malaysia, Singapore, the Philippines, and Vietnam. It is also a Pepsi Ice twin version.
- Pepsi Green: a bright-green variety introduced in Thailand on January 15, 2009.[45]
- Pepsi Creaming Soda : A strong cream and vanilla light pepsi tasting soda. Giving out an ice cream milkshake like flavor. Available in Australia & New Zealand.
- Pepsi Ice: Pepsi with an icy mint flavor. Sold in Guam, Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, and the Philippines. In summer 2007 Pepsi used the name Pepsi Ice in the Czech Republic and Slovakia for a limited edition cola with apple flavor.
- Pepsi Light: sold in Australia and New Zealand for short time.
- Pepsi Aha: Lemon-flavored Pepsi sold in India
- Pepsi Pinas: Pepsi Blue renamed sold in Philippines
- Pepsi Pogi: Sold only in Philippines
- Pepsi Mango:Available both in Australia & New Zealand since 2021.
- Pepsi Latte: Sold in Thailand
- Pepsi Tarik: Coffee-flavored, sold in Malaysia and Singapore
Low-calorie varieties
[edit]Diet Pepsi/Pepsi Light
[edit]This section needs additional citations for verification. (October 2015) |
Name | Launched | Notes |
---|---|---|
Diet Pepsi | 1963/1964 | The original low-calorie version of Pepsi. It was first test marketed in 1963 under the name Patio Diet Cola, and was re-branded as Diet Pepsi when it officially launched in 1964. It is known as Pepsi Light in most international regions, and Pepsi Diet in the UK from the late-1990's until 2013. |
Caffeine Free Diet Pepsi | 1982 | Pepsi without the Caffeine. It was first introduced in 1982 as Diet Pepsi Free but was changed to its current name in 1987. It is also available in some other regions including the United Kingdom. |
Diet Pepsi Wild Cherry | 1988 | Cherry flavored Diet Pepsi, introduced in 1988. It was known under the slightly different name of Diet Wild Cherry Pepsi until 2005, and was originally found in scarce regions until the rebranding. |
Diet Pepsi AM | 1989 | A variety of Diet Pepsi that contained 25% extra caffeine and was marketed as a morning drink. It was introduced in test markets in August 1989, but was discontinued in October 1990 due to poor sales and reception.[1] |
Diet Crystal Pepsi | 1992 | A low-calorie Clear cola that was sold for a short time between 1992 and 1993. Unlike its regular counterpart, this version has never been re-released. |
Diet Pepsi Kona | 1996 | Diet Pepsi with Coffee flavoring. It was test-marketed in Philadelphia during May 1996 until 1997, which due to low sales, never led to a full release. |
Diet Pepsi Lemon | 2000 | Lemon-flavored Diet Pepsi. It was first released as Diet Pepsi Twist in 2000, and was discontinued alongside its regular counterpart in 2006. It was re-released as Diet Pepsi NFL Kickoff during the NFL kickoffs of 2008, and again under its current name as a permanent variety in 2009. It is however, no longer available. |
Diet Pepsi Vanilla | 2003 | Diet Pepsi with Vanilla flavoring. It was released in the US and Canada in 2003 as Pepsi's answer to Vanilla Coke.[4] It remained on shelves even after the regular version was discontinued. |
Diet Pepsi Lime | 2004 | Pepsi with Lime flavoring. It was introduced in 2004 Diet Coke with Lime and remained on shelves after the regular variety was discontinued. It is also sold in Spain as Pepsi Light Lima. |
Diet Pepsi Jazz | 2006/2007 | A series of flavored colas available exclusively in diet form. The range launched with Black Cherry French Vanilla and Strawberries and Cream flavors in July 2006, followed on with a Caramel Cream flavor in February 2007. They were all discontinued by 2009. |
Pepsi Light Mojito | 2006/2007 | A Non-alcoholic mojito-flavored Pepsi Light. it was Germany in 2008 and later sold in Italy in 2009 as a Limited Edition. |
Diet Pepsi Cherry Vanilla | 2010 | Diet Pepsi with Cherry Vanilla flavoring. It was released for the Summer 2010 for eight weeks. |
Diet Pepsi (Splenda formula) | 2015 | Diet Pepsi sweetened with Sucralose instead of Aspartame. It was first released in 2015 as a reformulation of regular Diet Pepsi, which replaced the original aspartame-sweetened formula until 2018. While no longer available for retail, it can still be purchased via E-commerce.[46] |
Pepsi Max
[edit]This section needs additional citations for verification. (October 2015) |
Name | Launched | Notes |
---|---|---|
Pepsi Max | 1993 | The original variation of the drink. It was first introduced in 1993 in the United Kingdom and Italy, and since expanded across the world. It has no connection to the American Pepsi Max which is now known as Pepsi Zero Sugar. |
Pepsi Max Lemon | 2004 | A lemon-flavored variety. It was first sold in Belgium as Pepsi Max Cool Lemon (before renaming in 2017) and has also been sold in Norway, Sweden, The Netherlands, and Germany. |
Pepsi Max Lemon & Lime Twist | 2005 | A Lemon/Lime flavored variety. It was introduced to the United Kingdom in early 2005, and was discontinued by 2007. it was also sold in France as Pepsi Max Citron Citron Vert. |
Pepsi Max Punch | 2005 | A ginger and cinnamon flavored version that was sold in the United Kingdom for the 2005 Christmas Season. It is similar to Pepsi Holiday Spice. |
Pepsi Max Gold | 2006 | A ginger-hinted variant that was sold alongside the regular Pepsi Gold in Finland for the 2006 FIFA World Cup. |
Pepsi Max Coffee Cino | 2006 | A coffee-flavored variety sold in a number of countries. It was released in the United Kingdom in 2006, but was withdrawn a year later.[47] It was also released in France and Portugal as Pepsi Max Cappuccino. |
Pepsi Max Chill | 2007 | An Apple-flavored variety that was sold as a limited edition in Sweden and Finland in the Summer of 2007. |
Pepsi Max Mojo | 2008 | A Mojito Lime/mint-flavored variety that was sold in Finland in 2008. It was also available in Denmark in 2009 as Pepsi Max Mojito. |
Pepsi Max Energy | 2008 | A variant with 66% more caffeine than the standard variety. It was sold in Germany in 2008. |
Pepsi Max Wild Side | 2010 | A Wild baobab flavored variety that was sold in Sweden in 2010. |
Pepsi Max Lime | 2011 | A Lime-favored variety. It was first sold as Pepsi Max Cease Fire and Pepsi Max Citrus Freeze in Australia/New Zealand and the United Kingdom respectively in 2011 as part of a promotion with Doritos corn chips. It was re-released in Australia under its current name for a limited time in 2016, and re-released in the United Kingdom in 2021. It has since been introduced in Lebanon, Finland, Sweden, Norway, Iceland, Hungary, Romania, Poland, Serbia, Czech Republic. |
Pepsi Max Cherry | 2011 | A Cherry-flavored variety. It was first released in the United Kingdom in June 2011 only at Asda stores in 2 liter bottles, and gained a wide release in 2012. It has also been released in France (2014), Denmark, Norway, Germany (2015), Finland, Iceland (2016) and Russia (2018).[48] |
Pepsi Max Ginger | 2017 | A Ginger-flavored variety. It has been released in the United Kingdom, Lebanon, Russia, Norway, Finland, The Netherlands, Denmark, Sweden and Germany. |
Pepsi Max Vanilla | 2018 | A Vanilla-flavored variety. It was first sold in Australia in February 2018 and was later released in New Zealand in April. It was later released in Poland and Germany.[49] |
Pepsi Max Raspberry | 2018 | A Raspberry-flavored variety. It was first sold in Australia in 2018, and was later released in United Kingdom since March 2019 and in Turkey since 2020. It was also sold in Nordic countries like Sweden, France (as Pepsi Black Raspberry), Russia, Taiwan and the United Arab Emirates. |
Pepsi Max Creaming Soda | 2019 | A Cream Soda-flavored variety. It was sold in Australia in August 2019. |
Pepsi Max Mango | 2020 | A Mango-flavored variety that was first sold in Australia in August 2020 and later made available in Hungary, Poland, Czech Republic, Serbia, Sweden, Turkey, Denmark, and most recently the United Kingdom. |
Pepsi Max No Caffeine | 2020 | A Caffeine-free variety that was introduced in the United Kingdom in 2021. |
Pepsi Max Electric | 2024 | A blue-colored variant that was first sold in Norway in April 2024 by Ringnes.[50] It will be sold in the United Kingdom for a year-long period in May as simply Pepsi Electric, released through Britvic.[51] It is similar to that of Pepsi Blue. |
Other Low-Calorie Varieties
[edit]Name | Launched | Notes |
---|---|---|
Pepsi Light | 1975 | An alternative variant of Diet Pepsi sold in the United States. It featured a Lemon flavor that was used to overcome the powerful aftertaste of Saccharin. The Lemon flavoring was removed in 1984 when the sweetener was changed to Aspartame, and was discontinued by 1988. It has no connection to the alternative name Diet Pepsi uses in most countries. |
Pepsi Max (Canada) | 1994 | The Canadian version of Pepsi Max used a completely different formula than the one used internationally (Although haring the same packaging design), being a mid-calorie cola sweetened with a blend of Corn Syrup and Aspartame.[52] It was discontinued by 2002. |
Pepsi XL | 1995 | A mid-calorie cola targeted at males, and transition consumers making the move from regular to diet colas, similar to the version of Pepsi Max sold in Canada. It was sweetened with a 50/50 blend of Corn Syrup and Aspartame. It was test-marketed in Florida in 1995, but possible low sales never led to a full release in the United States.[53] |
Pepsi One | 1998 | A one-calorie cola that was originally sweetened with a blend of Aspartame and Acesulfame Potassium, with one calorie per serving. It was made to be similar to the international Pepsi Max but used its own formula. Aspartame was exchanged for Splenda-branded Sucralose in 2005 with a major rebranding. It continued to use the 2003 Pepsi design until mid-2012, and then swapped to the new logo. It was discontinued in 2015, following low sales and the swapping of Diet Pepsi's main sweetener from Aspartame to Sucralose. |
Pepsi Edge | 2004 | A mid-calorie cola sold in the United States and Canada that contained half the carbohydrates, calories and sugars of a normal Pepsi, and was sweetened with Splenda brand Sucrolose. It was PepsiCo's answer to the similarity-short-lived Coca-Cola C2. It was known as Pepsi Avantage in Canadian French. The drink suffered from poor sales, and was discontinued in 2005.[54]
It was featured on an episode of The Apprentice 2 in which teams had to design a prototype bottle. |
Pepsi NEX | 2006 | A zero-calorie Pepsi available in Japan and South Korea, developed by Suntory[55] (Also advertised through the anime Tiger & Bunny and U-Know and Max of TVXQ)[56][57] |
Pepsi Zero Sugar | 2007 | A zero-calorie cola. It was originally known as Diet Pepsi Max (2007-2008) and Pepsi Max (2008-2016), although it's not related to the drink sold outside the US and Canada.[58] Until a formula change in Late-2022, the drink had more caffeine than standard Pepsi, alongside ginseng extract. |
Pepsi Twist 3 | 2008 | A low-calorie version of Pepsi that was sold in Mexico. It contains three calories of the natural Lemon Juice. |
Pepsi Kick | 2009 | A version of Diet Pepsi with extra Caffeine and Ginseng. It was introduced in Mexico in 2009. |
Pepsi Twist Zero | 2010 | A zero-calorie Lime-flavored cola that was available in Brazil. |
Pepsi Max Cease Fire | 2010 | A Lime-flavored variant of Pepsi Max sold in the United States that was released as part of a promotional tie-in with special "Burn" Doritos corn chips. |
Pepsi Next | 2012 | A mid-calorie version of Pepsi released in March 2012, described by the company as having "60% lower sugar content and fewer calories."[59] It was discontinued by 2015. |
Pepsi Next Cherry Vanilla | 2012 | A mid-calorie Cherry Vanilla flavored Pepsi that was sold for a limited time in the summer of 2012.[60] |
Pepsi Next Paradise Mango | 2012 | A mid-calorie Mango flavored Pepsi that was sold for a limited time in the summer of 2012.[60] |
Pepsi Next (Stevia version) | 2013 | The version of Pepsi Next in some regions outside the United States are sweetened with Stevia as the sweetener. It was sold in Canada, France and The Netherlands. The packaging was later changed to that of Pepsi True. |
Pepsi Strong Zero | 2015 | A variation of Diet Pepsi with extra carbonation and caffeine. It was sold in Japan by Suntory in 2015 alongside its regular counterpart.[61] |
Pepsi Black | 2017 | A low-calorie cola similar to but not to be confused with Pepsi Max. It was introduced in 2017 in Croatia, the Czech Republic, Greece, Hungary, Slovakia, Slovenia, and Ukraine. In the latter countries, it replaced Pepsi Light.[62] |
Pepsi Zero Sugar Mango | 2021 | A Mango-flavored variant of Pepsi Zero Sugar sold in the United States. It was introduced to coincide with the permanent release of the standard Pepsi Mango. |
Pepsi Zero Sugar Wild Cherry | 2021 | A Cherry-flavored variant of Pepsi Zero Sugar sold in the United States. |
Pepsi Zero Sugar Vanilla | 2021 | A Vanilla-flavored variant of Pepsi Zero Sugar sold in the United States. |
Pepsi Zero Sugar Soda Shop Cream Soda | 2022 | A Cream Soda-flavored variant of Pepsi Zero Sugar sold as part of the Pepsi Soda Shop range. It was sold as a limited edition in November 2022, joining the standard variety. |
Fictional drinks
[edit]- Pepsi Perfect: A vitamin-enriched Pepsi variation shown in the movie Back to the Future Part II in scenes set in the year 2015.
References
[edit]- ^ a b "They're Not Waking Up to Pepsi AM, Soft Drink Maker Finds". AP News. New York. October 15, 1990.
- ^ a b c "Pepsi tests 'Wild Bunch': Pepsi-Cola Co. has..." Chicago Tribune. February 23, 1991. Archived from the original on May 7, 2019.
- ^ "PEPSI SEES CITRUS APPEAL IN ITS CRYSTAL". 18 July 1994.
- ^ a b Jed, Emily (July 2014). "Real Sugar Pepsi Hits Market". Vending Times. 54 (7). posted online June 20, 2014. Archived from the original on 2 November 2014. Retrieved 10 January 2016.
- ^ "Remembering Pepsi Holiday Spice".
- ^ "PepsiCo launches Pepsi Ginger Cola in Canada with more natural ingredients". April 13, 2016.
- ^ a b "Pepsi's Mysterious New Craft Soda Is Here: Pepsi 1893 Original and Ginger Cola". 25 March 2016. Retrieved 2016-09-22.
- ^ a b 1893 From The Makers of Pepsi-Cola Expands Portfolio with Two Bold New Flavors, Citrus Cola and Black Currant Cola (press release, March 1, 2017
- ^ Pepsi [@pepsi] (January 31, 2021). "It's finally National Hot Chocolate Day! Share a pic of you cozied up with some hot cocoa using #nationalhotchocolateday & #pepsioffer for a chance to taste this awesome cola yourself. First 2,500 to tweet will be rewarded 2 cans. Offer Ends 2/1. https://t.co/Hb6CcbDBnb" (Tweet). Archived from the original on May 6, 2021. Retrieved October 3, 2021 – via Twitter.
- ^ "Pepsi and Peeps Have Joined Forces to Create Marshmallow Soda | PEOPLE.com". Archived from the original on 2021-03-25.
- ^ a b "Pepsi® Introduces Pepsi-Cola Soda Shop in Cream Soda and Black Cherry with New Music Video Featuring Global Pop Star Doja Cat and Her Modern Take on a Classic Track from "Grease"" (Press release). PRNewswire. September 10, 2021. Retrieved December 27, 2021.
- ^ a b "Nitro Pepsi". PepsiCo. Retrieved March 26, 2022.
- ^ "Pepsi Café Chino launched". The Hindu Business Line. 2006-01-20. Retrieved 2010-06-01.
- ^ Week, Marketing (February 27, 2003). "Pepsi X". Marketing Week.
- ^ "Global Cola: 10 Pepsi-Cola Flavors You Can't Get Here". WebUrbanist.com. May 2, 2010. Retrieved January 10, 2016.
- ^ Watson, Elaine; Bouckley, Ben (September 7, 2010). "Pepsi RAW: Where did it all go wrong?". FoodManufacture.co.uk. Retrieved January 10, 2016.
- ^ "Introducing Pepsi Ice Cucumber". FoodiePrints.com. [permanent dead link]
- ^ Marvo (June 25, 2008). "REVIEW: Pepsi Blue Hawaii". The Impulsive Buy. Retrieved January 10, 2016.
- ^ "Breville Juicer BJE510XL: The Best Juicer For Your Healthy Living - Bestbuyhq - Top rated Products and Reviews". 9 April 2017.
- ^ "Japan's New Pepsi White is Flavored Orange". 31 October 2012.
- ^ "Citrus-packing Pepsi White". 5 November 2015.
- ^ Marvo (July 7, 2009). "REVIEW: Pepsi Shiso". TheImpulsiveBuy.com. Retrieved January 10, 2016.
- ^ "「ペプシあずき」季節限定発売" ['Pepsi Azuki' seasonal sale]. Suntory.co.jp (Press release) (in Japanese). September 29, 2009. Retrieved January 10, 2016.
Suntory Food Co., Ltd., and a seasonal sale in the country from the "Pepsi Azuki" October 20 as a lineup of PEPSI (Tuesday).
- ^ "ペプシバオバブ」季節限定発売" ['Pepsi Baobab' seasonal sale]. Suntory.co.jp (Press release) (in Japanese). April 27, 2010. Retrieved January 10, 2016.
Suntory Food Co., Ltd., and a seasonal sale in the country from the "Pepsi Baobab" May 25 as a lineup of PEPSI (Tuesday).
- ^ Akcasu, Audrey (May 21, 2015). "Pepsi Strong: Newest drink in the Pepsi line-up is ready to kick your butt". RocketNews24.com. Retrieved May 18, 2017.
- ^ McGee, Oona (May 19, 2016). "Japan gets world's strongest carbonated Pepsi, packaged in a new reinforced bottle". RocketNews24.com. Retrieved May 18, 2017.
- ^ Levenstein, Steve. "Pepsi Mont Blanc Bottles The Flavor Of Chestnuts". InventorySpot.com. Archived from the original on November 17, 2018. Retrieved January 10, 2016.
- ^ Levenstein, Steve (April 28, 2011). "How Sweet it Isn't: With New 'Pepsi Dry', Bitter is Better". InventorySpot.com. quoting WalkerPlus.com, April 27, 2011. Archived from the original on January 17, 2019. Retrieved March 10, 2012.
- ^ "Suntory to release Caribbean Gold on July 26, 2011". Suntory.co.jp (Press release) (in Japanese). Retrieved January 10, 2016. [permanent dead link]
- ^ "Suntory to release Pepsi Pink on November 8, 2011". suntory.co.jp (in Japanese). [permanent dead link]
- ^ Baseel, Casey (October 29, 2014). "Pink strawberry milk Pepsi set to return to stores in Japan this winter". RocketNews24.com. Retrieved January 10, 2016.
- ^ Oakland, Mike (July 29, 2015). "Is the world ready for Lemon & Mint Pepsi?". RocketNews24.com. Retrieved January 10, 2016.
- ^ Master Blaster (October 6, 2015). "'Pepsi Ghost' Brings a Mysterious New Flavor for Halloween in Japan". RocketNews24.com. Retrieved January 10, 2016.
- ^ "World's first-ever Sakura Pepsi coming to Japan this March". 8 February 2016.
- ^ "Cake-Flavored Pepsi Coming To Japan". Kotaku.com. November 7, 2017. Retrieved November 14, 2017.
- ^ Patrick St. Michel (September 30, 2017). "'Pepsi Halloween Cola: Pink drink may be too sweet for some". Japantimes.co.jp. Retrieved November 11, 2017.
- ^ "Pepsi Orange Tastes Like Citrusy Soda, and It's Now Available in the U.S." Finance.yahoo.com. June 9, 2020. Retrieved April 25, 2023.
- ^ "Pepsi Japan teases new limited-edition flavour with clever marketing". Soranews24.com. October 22, 2020. Retrieved January 17, 2023.
- ^ "Pepsi releases a new cola in Japan specifically for karaage fried chicken". Soranews24.com. June 9, 2022. Retrieved April 25, 2023.
- ^ Medina, Rafaello. "Pepsi o Capuchino - El nuevo producto estará en el mercado guatemalteco a partir de enero de 2006" [Pepsi or Cappuccino - The new product will be in the Guatemalan market from January 2006]. ElPeriodico.com (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 2014-08-11. Retrieved 2014-07-31.
- ^ Medina, Rafaello (January 23, 2006). "Guerra de precios en las sodas" [Price War in Soda]. ElSalvador.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 2014-07-31.
- ^ Vescovi, Valentina (2009-07-15). "Pepsi Becomes 'Pecsi' in Argentina". Adage.com. Advertising Age. Retrieved 2012-09-26.
- ^ "Pepsi Now Selling As 'Pecsi' In Mexico". Tuvez.com. March 2011. Archived from the original on 2012-08-08. Retrieved 2012-09-26.
- ^ Farr, Annette (2007-09-06). "ANALYSIS: (Coca-Cola) Blak to the drawing-board". Just Drinks. Archived from the original on 2018-11-26. Retrieved 2017-12-16.
- ^ Apichonrojarek, Kitja (January 16, 2009). "Pepsi Eyes Growth Despite Slow Market". Bangkok Post. Retrieved January 27, 2009.
- ^ Diet Pepsi with Splenda Archived 2018-11-27 at the Wayback Machine - Official Site for PepsiCo Beverage Information | Product
- ^ Mark Choueke. "Supermarkets poised to axe Pepsi coffee-flavoured cola". Marketing Week. Retrieved 2010-06-01.
- ^ "Pepsi Max a son cherry" [Pepsi Max has cherry] (in French). Rayon Bouissons. April 1, 2014. Retrieved January 10, 2016.
- ^ "Pepsi MAX Vanilla". Archived from the original on 2022-01-23. Retrieved 2022-01-23.
- ^ "Pepsi Max Electric Blue". Archived from the original on 2024-05-10. Retrieved 2024-05-10.
- ^ "Pepsi set to super-charge soft drinks with bold Electric blue cola". Britvic plc (LSE: BVIC).
- ^ Summerfield, Patti (January 24, 1994). "Pepsi Max gets a big kick-off". Strategy. Retrieved December 27, 2021.
- ^ "PEPSI TESTS NEW LOW-CALORIE COLA | Supermarket News". 3 April 1995.
- ^ "Pepsi Edge drink loses its fizzle - May. 20, 2005".
- ^ "Suntory Announces Launch of "PEPSI NEX" ~ World Debut of Original Suntory PEPSI Brand ~ New Generation Cola Hits Store Shelves Refuting the idea that 'colas come from America'". Suntory.com (Press release). 19 January 2006. Retrieved 2006-07-04.
- ^ Blue Rose's Commercial: Pepsi NEX. signusinfinity. April 12, 2011. Archived from the original on February 3, 2021. Retrieved October 3, 2021 – via YouTube.
- ^ "동방신기, '펩시 넥스' CF모델 선정 - 건강한 웃음 푸른 희망 - 스포츠월드" [TVXQ, 'Pepsi Nex' CF model chosen] (in Korean). Sportsworldi.segye.com. May 12, 2011. Retrieved 2012-09-26.
- ^ "New Invigorating Zero-Calorie Cola Hits Shelves This Summer". BevNET.com. Purchase, New York. February 22, 2007. Retrieved January 10, 2016.
- ^ Team, Trefis (April 9, 2012). "PepsiCo Bubbles To $71 By Pumping Up Pepsi Next". Forbes. Retrieved January 10, 2016.
- ^ a b Marvo (July 30, 2012). "REVIEW: Pepsi Next Cherry Vanilla & Pepsi Next Paradise Mango". TheImpulsiveBuy.com. Retrieved January 10, 2016.
- ^ "Pepsi Strong - Japan Today". 22 May 2015.
- ^ Pepsi brez sladkorjev[permanent dead link] - Official Pepsi Slovenia - Pepsi Black