If you’ve journeyed deep enough into the world of true, incense-grade oud oils, you’ll know there’s a moment — that unmistakable snap in the heart and base — when the wood bares its soul. That steely, shimmering, bluish-violet inner fire… the narcotic floral-pepper “zing” that no modern tweak, no distiller’s sleight of hand, can conjure. Only old, high grade wood grants it.
Myanma Omnia carries that fire without restraint.
Though distilled from wild wood from Shan state, this oud oil's scent is Burma in its entirety — not a single jungle, not a narrow micro-profile — but the country’s olfactory topography distilled into a single, seamless arc.
It is the pure, textbook expression of Burmese agarwood: expansive, regal, and utterly transportive.
The opening flashes with that familiar cola-pepper sparkle — a bright, glinting ignition reminiscent of the highland jungles of central Burma. Minutes later, the scent widens, thickens, and settles into a deep amber-tawny glow. Here the Indian-leaning nuances unfurl: sweet sun-dried hay, with just a hint of warm hide-like leather, and a soft golden hum that brings a textured, velvety gravity to the heart.
Then the base arrives — and this is where Myanma Omnia flexes its pedigree. Rugged, shadowed, timber-dense accords rise from the southern jungles: dark resinous wood, mineral-flecked bark, and a masculine earthiness that grounds the entire composition in something ancient and unshakably real. It’s not abrasive, not smoky — but resolutely wild. The kind of depth only wood of a certain age and rank can yield.
This oil is weighty, full-spectrum — a “chewy” distillation that moves like molten honey from top to base. The upper register still sings with crystalline clarity, but everything below resonates several octaves deeper, with a profoundly rounded, almost tactile richness.
For collectors ascending toward the summit tiers of oud, Myanma Omnia is your usher. A first-class immersion into the soul of Burma’s agarwood, rendered with uncompromising fidelity and unapologetic grandeur.
I think I might sell my soul
for this. Oh my lord.
I swear to you when I say, it literally smells so awesome
it makes me have the same feeling you get when you smoke
the absolute perfect cigar. That welling up inside
feeling. Wow...
I sincerely can’t believe it. Sounds like the ravings of a
crazy person but it’s true.
Truly magical things are so rare...especially when you get
to be our age. I think it only comes when your children do
things that blow your mind...otherwise, it’s a very rare
instance that any “product” has that type of impact.
Z.W. (USA)
Such a beauty ❤️
B.A. (Kuwait)
Yesterday when I toke strong breath of Cintaku I felt my
soul left the body. This feeling I love
B.A. (Kuwait)
I just swiped some Cintaku. All I smell is vaporous mind
buzz at the start
A.Z. (USA)
The other oil I've spent some time with is Cintaku and I
really like the pretty cola.
J.L. (USA)
Cintaku is next level ... dont know how Royal Malaya was
but Cintaku is one of the best Malay if not the best Malay
...
D.P. (India)
Cintaku is 🤯 That is the Bomb
I found Cintaku kind of a shapeshifter ... between that
green Malaya note and Cola note.
It has more cola vibe than Malaya ... atleast to my nose
D.P. (India)
man cintaku is smelling nice tonight...
I even enjoy it a bit more than makhota in some aspects
T.D. (USA)
Cintaku is more of a mysterious green blue jungle scent
with cola like nuances and crushes peppers from another
planet.
T.D. (USA)
Today I applied Cintaku. Mashallah very different. Has
some like boiling milk profile. Has also green tone
N. R. (Oman)
Yeah - so cintaku is obviously royal grade when compared
to mulia and high sik - it is more rich - very interesting
how the three relate.
I will have to do a 3 way comparison soon.
Mulia is still a beast - but the Royal grade is more
refined and beautiful.
J.W. (USA)