O-PCE is a word to the wise, so is Eticyclidone (which I think is very elegant too) as Eticyclidine is not something the average user is at all familiar with. Phenoxetamine has that ring of methoxetamine, of ketamine and eticyclidine, known players in the field. It would be far more instructive just by name than an abbreviation would be. Theres already so much alphabet soup, lay people cant visualize the chemistry behind the abbreviations so a word with a familiar ring gives them more to hold onto.



Its also commercially interesting because you correctly appeal to famous and enjoyed drug names. This is that I hated about "MXP" its suggests its related to MXE but it has a different effects and more importantly, safety profile. First member of its class, diphenidine, killed a bluelighter when it was just out and mindfucked more than a few veterans. To me MXP would be the propyl analog of MXE, that would make sense.



Not that I have any say in things, but bluelight is influential. I strongly recommend vendors to drop the bogus names and sales tactics and stay true to the chemistry:



Phenoxetamine

Eticyclidone

O-PCE

2-Oxo-Eticyclidine

2-Oxo-PCE



are the realistic, instructive ones so far. I think the last two are redundant. No one ever used 3-MeO-2-Oxo-PCE for Methoxetamine and the chemically inclined would "get" O-PCE just as readily as the more explicit abbreviations.



Its not a nickname we're thinking up here, its a generic name we're after. When Leo Sternbach synthesized a new substance that had tranquilizing effects he did so working for Roche so the lab code was R0 6-690. When it was viable it was christened Chlordiazepoxide, the generic name. It was still a mouthful for a little pill so the trade name became Librium. No doctor will prescribe you a R0 6-690 and nobody says, "ew I have stage freight, lets pop a R0 6-690." Its not just nicknames, theres good reason for these names, as they pass from chemists (lab code) to physicians (generic name) and the general public (trade name). It has to do with how peoples brains work, from scientific minds to, well, party people in an advanced state of intoxication. A good name cautions and educxates and thus, unites commercial interest with harm reduction.



How is O-PCE for a lab code, Eticyclidone for a generic name and Phenoxetamine for a trade name?