Greatest Smells of All Time - Old Books or Coffee Brewing

Pick Your Favorite

OLD BOOKS

VS

COFFEE BREWING
0%

Your GOAT List

Why This Battle Matters

Who rules the olfactory realm: the evocative scent of coffee brewing or the nostalgic aroma of old books? This isn't just a matchup; it's a sentinel event in the Smells of All Time league, pitting the invigorating, daily ritual against the deep, quietude of timeless pages. What's at stake? The power to define the quintessential comfort scent that soothes our souls and ignites our mornings. Today, you decide what we hold dearer—is it the fresh charge of caffeine's promise or the whispered tales of bound leather and paper?

Coffee Brewing vs. Old Books

🔥 Fan Takes

I'm kinda torn, guys. Coffee is life in the morning, but old books? That's pure, undistilled charm.
lol imagine choosing musty old books over the fresh zing of coffee brewing? wake up ppl 😂
Nah, old books smell like history and wisdom had a baby. 📚 Can't top that nostalgia vibe!

How Fans Are Voting

In this battle:

Fans currently prefer Coffee Brewing over Old Books when it comes to the greatest Smells of all time. In head-to-head matchups, fans pick Coffee Brewing 85.0% of the time over Old Books.

Across all battles:

Coffee Brewing win rate: 63.7%

Old Books win rate: 38.3%

Fan FAQs

Who's the #1 contender on GoatWars in this league?

Currently, Freshly Baked Cookies holds the top spot on the GOAT List. Check it out here: GOAT List

What’s the major draw for fans of Old Books?

Fans of Old Books are all about the nostalgia and the magic of history wrapped up in that musty smell. It's tied to the joy of reading and those quiet moments in old libraries or cozy bookshops. It reminds them of timeless adventures and forgotten worlds.

Why is Coffee Brewing dominating over Old Books in the Greatest Smells of All Time league?

Coffee Brewing is leading mainly because it hits that daily comfort spot for a lot of fans. The rich aroma is something people wake up to every morning, triggering a warm and energizing feeling. It just resonates more universally than the nostalgic, yet less frequently encountered scent of old books.