My lips are the one part of my skincare routine I never used to think about and it has costed me big time. I somehow ended up with pigmented lips. I tried the Hyphen lip balm and it worked really well. You can check out the review here. Anyway, I recently tried three very different lip products, all of which are in permanent rotation. One’s an old-school Ayurvedic balm, one’s a Korean “lip serum in a stick,” and one’s an Indian-American brand’s take on ghee-for-your-lips. They all do slightly different jobs, and honestly, that’s exactly why I’ve stopped looking for “the one.”
The Quick Take
Forest Essentials Narangi Glaze is my nighttime repair balm. Belif Superknights Lipcerin is my problem-solver for actual flaking and dead skin. Indē Wild Dewy Lip Treatment is my everyday, glides-on-in-two-seconds, looks-good-under-lipstick pick. Together they’ve quietly become a little lip-care system I didn’t know I needed.
Forest Essentials Luscious Lip Balm — Narangi Glaze
Price & Quantity
₹850 for a 4g pot.
Ingredients
Kokum Butter (7%) and Sweet Almond Kernel Oil (5%) form the emollient base, with Sweet Orange or Narangi Juice (2%) providing the namesake citrus note and a mild brightening effect. The rest of the formula is Cocoa Seed Butter, Organic Beeswax, Honey, and Vitamin E. It is a genuinely short, kitchen-shelf ingredient list, true to Forest Essentials’ Ayurvedic positioning.

Texture
I need to talk about the packaging as well before I get into texture. Oh my god! The packaging is so, so gorgeous. It comes in a grand golden oval pot with a small mirror attached to it. This is a proper balm in a pot, not a stick. you dip a finger in and pat it on. It’s noticeably richer and heavier than the other two on this list, closer to a lip mask than a daily balm. It sits on the lips for some time rather than sinking in immediately, which is exactly what you want from an overnight or occasional deep-treatment product.
My Take
This is the one I reach for at night, or on days my lips genuinely feel sandpapery. The orange and honey scent is lovely, sweet without being sickly and by morning my lips actually feel repaired, not just coated. My only real complaint is practical: it’s a pot, not a stick, so it’s not something I’m dipping into mid-meeting or tossing in a small bag. This lives on my nightstand, not in my handbag. And most importantly, I could see real improvement in my pigmentation with this one even though it does not make any about it. So, even though expensive, I’m going to repurchase it.
Belif Superknights Multi Vitamin Lipcerin
Price & Quantity
₹1,920 for the 15ml twist-up stick.
Ingredients
Belif calls this a “lipcerin,” not a balm, and the formula backs that positioning up. The headline is the Multi Vitamin Complex — Niacinamide (B3), Ascorbic Acid (C), Tocopherol (E), and Cyanocobalamin (B12), paired with a triple exfoliation complex of Serine, Protease, and PHA (Gluconolactone) that gently dissolves dead skin rather than physically scrubbing it off. The emollient base leans on Shea Butter, Squalane, Sunflower Seed Oil, and Soybean Oil, rounded out with Carrot Root Extract and Cedrol for a faint woody scent.
Texture
It comes out of a dial-up stick applicator (twist the base, product rises), which keeps it hygienic and mess-free. The texture itself is a soft, semi-solid balm that melts on contact. It is somewhat lighter than the Forest Essentials pot, glossy rather than greasy, and it leaves a subtle sheen rather than a heavy coat.

My Take
This caters to my flaky, peeling lip corners, thanks to that PHA-and-enzyme exfoliation angle. It’s genuinely dual-purpose too; I’ve started using the leftover product on my cuticles and elbows the way Belif suggests, and it works there too. It’s the priciest of the three per ml, but it’s also doing the most active “treatment” work rather than just moisturizing.
Indē Wild Dewy Lip Treatment
Price & Quantity
₹799 MRP for 15ml (regularly available closer to ₹735–760 on quick-commerce and marketplace apps).
Ingredients
Indē Wild builds this around Squalane and Shea Butter as the core emollients, with Hydrolyzed Hyaluronic Acid for surface hydration and Oligopeptide-1 for lip-barrier support. Pomegranate Seed Oil and Damask Rose Flower Oil bring antioxidants, Lotus Flower Extract adds a soothing note, and Vitamin E, Linoleic Acid, and soybean-derived phospholipids round out the barrier-repair side. The brand’s whole positioning is built around mimicking the fatty-acid profile of ghee, minus the actual dairy. The formula is fully vegan.

Texture
This is the lightest, most “wearable” texture of the three. It glides on like a gloss rather than a balm, with a satin, dewy sheen rather than a hard shine, and it isn’t sticky at all which is rare for something this glossy-looking. It also layers beautifully over lipstick or lip liner if you want a glazed finish without the tackiness gloss usually brings.
My Take
This is my grab-and-go pick, hands down. It’s in my everyday bag, my desk drawer, and my car because it works equally well as a standalone balm, an overnight mask, or a topper over lip color. The original shade is genuinely sheer with no tint, which I appreciate since it means I can use it under makeup without any color interference.
How I Actually Use All Three
Indē Wild during the day for the “always in my bag” reapplication. Belif Superknights when my lips are actively peeling or feel rough usually a couple of times a week. Forest Essentials Narangi Glaze at night, especially after a day of talking too much or too much lipstick. None of them is trying to do the other’s job, which is probably why this combination has stuck longer than any single “holy grail” balm ever has.