Marquis reagent is the first step in our MDMA kit and the second step in our cocaine kit. It is especially effective at reacting with amphetamines, including MDMA, amphetamine, and methamphetamine. All reagents except for Morris and Ehrlich’s should be used with at least one other reagent whenever possible.
Each kit performs 50-75 tests.
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Automatic bulk discounts:
5+ reagents: $15 each
10+ reagents: $12.50 each
30+ reagents: $10 each
Mix and match okay. Discounts automatically applied at checkout. Preexisting sets of reagents are not included, since they are available in our store for a discounted price.
Marquis Reagent: Marquis reagent is the first step in both our MDMA kit and the second in our cocaine kit. It is especially effective at reacting with amphetamines, including MDMA, amphetamine, and methamphetamine.
Every reagent order comes with a full explanatory pamphlet.
Reagents are chemicals that turn certain colors when they come into contact with certain drugs. Reagents cannot detect every drug, nor can they tell you how pure or potent your drugs are. Even if you get the expected color reactions for the drug you want, there could still be one or more other drugs present. This is because:
Despite these limitations, reagent testing is useful for determining whether your sample definitely does not contain the drug you want.
1. Place a tiny amount of your drug onto a white, ceramic plate.
2. Carefully place one drop of reagent onto the sample.
3. Observe the color change and compare with the enclosed color chart.
4. Repeat.
5. Clean up.
Be aware: There are over 25,000 drugs on the market, and there are many factors that can influence a reagent reaction.
When you’re reading the color chart, it’s very important to remember that you’re looking for red flags, not green lights. You should see whether the color reactions you’re getting are “as expected” for a given drug.
If any reactions are unusual, the reaction is “not as expected.” It’s impossible to know which of the six factors listed below have caused an unexpected reaction without sending the sample to a lab like DrugsData.
Things that can cause an unexpected reaction:
Example: MDA has recently been turning green/black with Simon’s reagent instead of not reacting. Cocaine used to not react at all with Marquis reagent, but in recent years it almost always turns a pale peach or pink color. We suspect that this is due to a change in how both drugs are being made.
Example: When testing an MDMA pill, an “expected” reaction would be Marquis turning black, Simon’s turning blue, and Froedhe turning black. If Marquis turns orange instead of black, this is an immediate sign that there’s definitely no MDMA in your sample.
Example: When testing an Adderall pill from the internet, an “expected” reaction would be Marquis turning orange, Simon’s not reacting, and Liebermann turning orange. If Marquis turns orange, Simon’s doesn’t react, but Liebermann turns black, you know that something is wrong, but you don’t know what.
It might be tempting to try to make guesses about why you got an unexpected reaction, but you are always missing information without a full lab analysis. Even DrugsData can’t tell you whether there are inert bulking ingredients in your drug. It is sometimes possible to make educated guesses, but we usually find that those guesses are disproven by actual lab analysis.
Below are reactions for some of the most commonly used drugs. There are many online resources where people have collected additional reagent reactions for other drugs, but we haven’t verified them.
2023 updates: