I tested three popular vaporizer pens to break down the real difference between cannabis distillate, live resin, and live rosinโand which ones are actually worth it.
MICHIGANโVape pens are booming in Michigan.
Walk into any dispensary in the state and youโll find dozens of them stacked behind the counter. Walk down any random sidewalk and youโll probably find one there, too. And for the last several months, theyโve officially been outselling actual weed at dispensaries statewide.
But with so many optionsโand so many price pointsโit raises a simple question: What are you actually getting when you buy one of these things?
So, I did the dirty work.
I went to Pure Options in Lansing and picked up three disposable vape pens at three different price points to figure out what actually differentiates them. Because once you understand whatโs inside these things, you start to realize theyโre not all even playing the same game.
The lineup
All three of these vapes looked nearly identical at first glance.

But the pricesโand whatโs inside themโis a completely different story.
Hereโs what I tested:
- Batch (2g distillate) โ $20
- Pro Gro (1g live resin) โ $25
- Element (0.5g live rosin) โ $40
Distillate does the job (and not much else)
Letโs start at the bottom.
The Batch disposable is exactly what youโd expect from a $20, 2-gram vape: simple, functional, and aggressively basic. The hardware is cheap plastic, square-shaped, with a little viewing window on the side. Nothing fancyโbut it worked. No clogging, no issues, no drama.

And honestly, that might be the best thing I can say about it.
The flavor was generic. The strain was labeled as Runtz. But with distillate, that doesnโt always mean much. It tasted fine. A little sweet, a little vague; nothing offensive, nothing memorable.
And the high? Clean, light, almost sterile.
Distillate strips cannabis down to just THC, then adds flavor back in later. That means you get the main effect but none of the nuance that actually comes with smoking high-quality weed.
This is the frozen pizza of the weed world.
Itโs like drinking light beer when you want a craft IPA.ย
Like watching a movie on mute.
It works. But itโs just not what the cannabis experience was meant to be.
Live resin starts to feel like weed again
Next up: Pro Groโs live resin disposable.
This one immediately felt like a step up.

The hardware was sleeker, with colorful artwork on the side and a more polished feel overall.ย
The strain was Watermelon Grease Trap, whichโfull transparencyโIโve never heard of before.
But hereโs the key difference: It actually tasted like weed.
This pen was fruity, funky and a little skunky in a good way. None of that artificial cotton candy nonsense. No weird aftertaste. Just a clean, flavorful hit that felt closer to the real plant.
And the high followed suit.
Live resin is made from fresh-frozen cannabis, which preserves more of the plantโs natural compoundsโespecially terpenes. That translates into a fuller, more dynamic experience.
Itโs not overwhelming but itโs noticeably better than cheap distillate.
Live rosin is the real dealย
The live rosin pen was easily the best of the bunch. It wasnโt even close.
Element uses the exact same hardware as Pro Gro, just stripped down to plain black. The strain was RS11โalso known as Rainbow Sherbet #11. And this is where things got interesting. Because this was the only pen I bought that actually delivered on the strain.

RS11 is known for a sweet, fruity flavor and a smooth, euphoric high that leans relaxing without totally knocking you out. Itโs one of my favorites. And this pen pretty much nailed it.
The flavor was rich, layered, and unmistakably cannabis-forward. Not candy. Not artificial. Just straight-up, good cannabis oil. The high was full-bodied, balanced, and lasted for hours.
This is the difference with live rosin. Itโs made without solvents, using only heat and pressure to extract everything directly from the plant. Nothing is stripped out. Nothing is added back in. Itโs just the whole cannabis experience, exactly as your local cannabis farmer intended it to be.
The bottom line
Disposable vape pens might all look the same behind the counter.ย
But once you hit them, the differences are obvious.
The $20 distillate pen works. Itโll get you high. And if you want something cheap and convenient, it does the job. The live resin pen is a clear upgrade thatโs still relatively affordable. The live rosin, however, is the only type of disposable vape pen that actually feels worth it.ย
Itโs usually much more expensive and you usually get far less oil. But itโs the only one of the three that delivered a highโand a flavorโthat felt true to the plant.ย
And once you notice that difference, itโs pretty hard to go back to anything else.ย
READ MORE: Two Michigan strains that reminded me what good weed is supposed to be

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