Mountain Dew Wiki

ALL USERS: Hello and Welcome to the Mountain Dew Wiki! Here, you'll see detailed pages of flavors, promotions, logos, and more! If this is your first time on this wiki, feel free to explore the wonderful world of Mountain Dew! Have a great one, and remember to Do the Dew!

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Mountain Dew Wiki

Beginning in the early 2000s, following the success of Code Red, LiveWire, and other flavor variants, and the rise of photo-sharing through online websites, many fan-made Mountain Dew flavors began spreading widely. This page covers the most well-known fake and/or rumored flavors.

Also to note, this page is in a process of being redone. Give it a few days or a week, and the other fake/rumored flavors will show up.

Fake/Rumored Flavors[]

These are the well-known Fake/Rumored Flavors of Mountain Dew.

Can/Bottle/Logo Design Flavor History
Electrocution Grape (2003 - 2006) Obviously playing off on LiveWire's name, rumors of this grape flavor named Electrocution began spreading across online beverage-themed forums and discussion boards in 2003. It was said to have a scheduled release in 2004 but was pushed back to Easter 2005 to give room for Pitch Black's first release. Once Easter came and went without an Electrocution release, however, a "press release" about it surfaced, claiming that it would surely see an Easter 2006 release. It soon became clear that the flavor and everything related to it had been fabricated by a blogger trying to gain more traffic on their page.
Bottled Baja Blast Tropical Lime (2004 - 2005) Before Electrocution was discovered as a hoax, rumors of the Taco Bell-exclusive flavor Baja Blast getting a release to stores also began spreading, accompanied by an image of a bottle of the tropical-lime beverage. It was eventually discovered that the same blogger behind Electrocution was also behind these rumors. But eventually in 2014, the drink released in stores for the first time in summer.
Mountain Dew Clash
Mountain Dew Clash
Unknown (2007 - 2008) In February 2007, PepsiCo filed for a trademark on a possible design for an upcoming drink - "Mountain Dew Clash." Rumors of this possible drink first appeared when a member of the beverage-themed forums BevNet claimed to have received two test bottles of Clash from a product test panel. Included with his posts were a few very low-resolution images of the bottles, which used the same logo and packaging design as the trademarked one. However, Mountain Dew Clash never released, and no other images of it ever surfaced. PepsiCo abandoned the trademark in November 2008.

It is generally accepted that Mountain Dew Clash was a planned beverage whose plans were abandoned to make room for the other huge Mountain Dew promotions in 2007 (Game Fuel, DEWmocracy) and that the test bottles in the images posted were homemade.

Spring Gloom Lilac (2012) In accordance with April Fool's Day in 2012, a fake bottle design was posted by the Mountain Dew Facebook page, with this caption: "Introducing our newest flavor: Spring Bloom! It's DEW with a blast of lilac -- available near you for just 8 weeks."
CinnaBlast Cinnamon (2013) On May 31st, 2013, satirical newspaper The Onion had made an article and a YouTube video about a new flavor of Mountain Dew that was tainted by a malicious focus group, called Mountain Dew CinnaBlast. If you look closely at the CinnaBlast bottle shown in the image below, it's simply a recolored Code Red bottle.
Mountain Dew Revolution: "A Revolutionary Comeback
Mountain Dew Revolution: "A Revolutionary Comeback
Wild Berry Fruit (2020 - 2021) In November 2020, a photograph was posted on the r/MountainDew Reddit, supposedly from a marketing survey. The photograph, taken off a computer screen, showed a promotional poster of Mountain Dew Revolution, along with a zero-sugar version of it. The account of the poster was later deleted, spurring speculation from fans that PepsiCo took action on the poster.

On April 1st, 2021, the Dew Drinker Discord announced that the post was a hoax by a member of the community all along, and released a clean image of the fake leak. Despite being false, some websites shared the newly-released clean image in news articles, incorrectly claiming Revolution was to be re-released later in the year.

Funyuns Mountain Dew Funyuns (2022) In April 2022, an image supposedly showing a Funyuns flavored Mountain Dew began circulated on social media. The drink would've been yellow in color to match the the yellow packaging Funyuns come in. The image's popularity spread to the point where "Funyuns Mountain Dew" became a suggested search term in Google (which was acknowledged by Mountain Dew's Twitter). However, in reality, the image was a doctored photograph of Baja Flash. Similar to how ElectroCution was a play on the then-recently released LiveWire, this fake flavor is likely a play on Flamin' Hot, a flavor released around the same time this rumor spread.
Cake-Smash 2025 Store Release Leak Cake (2025) In February 2024, several joke leaks were posted by often-reliable Dew Insider, Team Supernova. One of which being the fabricated storewide "return" of Cake-Smash on April 31, 2025. Unlike other previous fake leaks, this one pretty much gives it away that it's a joke, as indicated by the small "(this is a joke)" on the bottom left of the image as well as April 31 not being a real date.
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