Dialed In Limited Edition Gummies Review (2026): Tested

The limited edition drops are the best version of Dialed In, and the gap is not small. A standard tin already runs on real solventless rosin. That standing line, the everyday sativa, indica, and sleep tins, gets its own hands-on verdict in our Dialed In Rosin Drops review. The collab batches go further: one numbered batch, one named hash maker, one flavor pair built around that specific rosin, and a run small enough that the tin in your hand might be one of a few thousand that will ever exist. I rate the limited edition line 4.4 out of 5. The concept and execution sit higher than that, and the missing half point is the cost of how fast the good batches disappear.

Dialed In Gummies is the Denver-built edibles company that Westword credits with starting the rosin edibles wave in Colorado. The limited edition gummies are its rotating collab line: small-batch tins pressed from a single rosin run with partners like Lazercat, Soiku Bano, and Bonsai Cultivation, sold with a batch number on the lid, then retired. Around Denver this spring the collab tins ran me $24 to $28 before tax, against $20 to $22 for the core line, and most of the drops never leave Colorado.

What a Limited Edition Drop Is. One Batch, One Hash Maker, One Flavor Pair.

The system is the same on every drop. Dialed In starts with rosin pressed from one cultivator’s fresh-frozen flower, gives the run a number, and builds a two-flavor pairing around how that specific hash actually tastes. The company says it has produced more than 2,600 numbered batches this way, with extraction limited to ice, water, pressure, and heat, per the brand’s own story page. No distillate, no trim, no recycled flavor system carried from batch to batch.

The current Colorado drops show how specific that gets. Batch #2620, a collab called Percolate, lands Dragon Fruit and Sour Apple flavors on a Soap x Runtz rosin and leans indica. Batch #2624, Friday Night Breakfast Club, pairs Watermelon and Pineapple with a Brass Billy rosin and leans sativa. Both are documented with those exact specs on the brand’s Colorado page. An earlier Bonsai Cultivation collab, the Gaper Day drop, capped production at 3,840 tins of a C&C x Grape Pi rosin finished in Grape Punch and Blue Ice. When that run is gone, it is gone, and the next number on the lid will be a different strain in a different flavor suit.

Dialed In sativa rosin gummies tin in orange sunburst packaging with a white Honeydew flavor flag
A core-line sativa tin, 60 grams, ten gummies. The flavor flag changes with the batch. Photo: Dialed In Gummies

The Collab Bench. Lazercat, Soiku Bano, and a Rotating Cast of Hash Makers.

The partner list is the substance behind the scarcity. Westword’s Best of Denver write-up names Lazercat and Soiku Bano as recurring extract partners and notes that the same batch-collab structure carried into the brand’s Liquid Gummies syrup line. These are hash makers with their own followings, which means a Dialed In drop functions like a guest feature: the rosin source is the headline, not a footnote on the ingredients panel.

The bench keeps rotating. One recent six-batch Colorado drop ran three Boulder Built collabs (Apres at the Amp on a Jelly Breath x Pancakes rosin, Tree Runs on a Zkittlez x Sherbanger, and Mary Jane on a Gelato x Gushmintz), plus Emerald Mile with In House Melts on a Foul Fingers x Death Coast rosin, Opening Day with LoCol Love on a Black Cherry Punch x Trop C, and I-70 Thangs with Bonsai Cultivation in Blueberry and Tropical Punch. Missouri gets its own bench: the Big Head drop runs a single-strain Heatlocker x Sherbhead rosin in 300 milligram tins, and Fruit Gusherz uses a TEAL-pressed Gelato #41 x Triangle Kush, per the brand’s state feeds.

That roster answers the question I always ask about collab products: is the partner doing real work, or licensing a logo? Here the partner supplies the actual input material, and the batch lists the cross it was pressed from. That is real work.

What I Tried. Two Months of Chasing Drops Around Denver.

I worked through three tins across April and May: the Bicycle Day collab with Boulder Built, a Project 4516 x The Soap rosin finished in Blue Ice and Honeydew, the Percolate batch #2620, and a core-line sativa tin as the control. Bicycle Day cost me $28 at Boulder Built’s shop, Percolate was $24 at a Denver store off Colfax, and the core sativa was $21 at Lightshade. Each tin holds ten gummies at 10 milligrams of rosin apiece.

My standard test dose was two pieces, 20 milligrams, on an empty-ish stomach in the early evening. Onset on all three landed in the same window: first wave around 35 minutes, full weight by the 50 minute mark, a long plateau through hour two and a half, and a slow taper instead of a cliff. That arc is the rosin difference in practice. The high reads wider than a distillate gummy, more body-involved on the indica batch and more conversational on the sativa side, with less of the flat, buzzy sameness I get from cheaper edibles at the same milligram count.

Percolate was the standout. The Dragon Fruit and Sour Apple pairing opens tart and finishes dark, and the effect matched the brand’s own framing of a dialed-down indica: heavy shoulders, quiet head, asleep within three hours and clear the next morning. Bicycle Day rode brighter, the Honeydew side of the flavor reads almost floral against the Blue Ice, and the high stayed social for the first ninety minutes before settling. The core sativa tin was good, and if I had never tried the collabs I would have called it very good. Tasted back to back, the difference is direction: the core flavor is built to be likable, the collab flavor is built to fit one specific hash, and you can taste the intent. The texture is the same across all three, a dense, low-sugar chew that does not shed sugar crystals in the tin and does not taste like a gas station candy aisle.

One practical note from the chase itself: two stores I called about Bicycle Day were already sold through, and the batch I wanted first, Friday Night Breakfast Club, never made it to a shelf within reach before this published. Plan on buying the drop you find, not the drop you read about.

Dosing and Onset. Ten Milligram Pieces, and a Sleep Tin That Moves in Minutes.

The dose math is simple in Colorado: ten gummies per tin, 10 milligrams of full-spectrum rosin each, 100 milligrams total. The company’s Massachusetts launch announcement confirms that structure across the sativa, indica, and hybrid tins, and details the one deliberate exception: the Acai Berry Sleep formulation moves to twenty pieces at 5 milligrams of THC each, paired with 5 milligrams of CBD and 5 milligrams of CBN per gummy, nanoemulsified for a claimed 5 to 15 minute onset with no melatonin in the recipe. The Sleep tin prints that 5-5-5 split right on the lid.

Dialed In Acai Berry Sleep tin listing 5mg CBN, 5mg CBD, and 5mg THC per gummy with a batch QR code on the label
The Sleep tin from the Innovation line: 5mg CBN, 5mg CBD, 5mg THC per gummy, with the batch QR code printed on the label. Photo: Dialed In Gummies

Potency on the input rosin is published batch by batch rather than averaged across the line. The Pink Clovers batch #1856, pressed by Antero Sciences, lists a 74.45 percent THC rosin with a 4.49 percent terpene profile led by caryophyllene, humulene, and limonene, plus 1.42 percent CBG, on its Leafly product listing. Two batches at the same 10 milligram dose can feel different because the underlying hash is different, which is the entire point of the format and also the reason to read the label before assuming a repeat experience.

Flavor Execution. Pairings That Read Like a Menu, Not a Candy Aisle.

Dialed In runs a low-sugar gummy with a dense chew, and the flavor program turns over constantly. Leafly’s brand profile describes weekly new batches across more than 30 flavors, with a sous-vide cooking process the company uses to keep terpenes and flavonoids intact through production. In practice that means the hash stays present in the finish. The Percolate gummies taste like dragon fruit up front and faintly like the rosin underneath, instead of using sugar to bury it.

Single red square cannabis gummy resting in an open palm against a gray background
The format: one dense, low-sugar 10mg piece. No sugar coating shedding into the tin.

The pairings also track the lean of the batch. The bright combinations, Watermelon and Pineapple, Blue Ice and Honeydew, sit on the sativa-leaning runs, while the dark fruit pairs, Grape Jam and Guava, Dragon Fruit and Sour Apple, land on the dialed-down indica side. Somebody is making those calls batch by batch, and after tasting across the lean line I think the calls are mostly right.

Batch Numbers and QR Codes. How to Read a Tin Before You Buy.

Every gummy run gets a number, and every tin carries a QR code that opens the cannabinoid and terpene data for that specific batch. The number ties to one production run of one rosin lot, which is why the same flavor can appear twice under different numbers and why some dispensary menu listings show a batch number while others skip it: the menu entry is optional, the number on the tin is not. If you want to verify a batch before buying, the lid has everything you need, and the brand’s product info pages resolve the QR data by state.

Retail listings sometimes carry the full pedigree too. When Westword field-tested edibles around Denver, the Dialed In tin in the lineup was labeled down to the cross, a Super Lemon Haze x Gupta Kush #22, and the writer’s budtenders talked through the solventless process unprompted. That is what batch culture looks like when it reaches the counter.

Price Check. What the Premium Buys.

My spring numbers around Denver: $20 to $22 for core-line tins, $24 to $28 for limited edition collabs. The premium buys the named rosin source, the smaller run, and honestly, the chase. Core tins go on real promo if you time it: last 4/20, Lightshade ran dollar BOGOs on Dialed In alongside Wana and Wyld, and The Herbal Cure took 30 percent off the line, per Westword’s deals roundup. The collab drops are a different animal. I have not seen one discounted, because they do not need to be; they sell through at sticker.

Per milligram, $24 to $28 for 100 milligrams of full-spectrum rosin is still cheaper than most concentrate-grade hash experiences, and the tin does not require a rig, a battery, or a lighter. As connoisseur formats go, this is the affordable one.

Limited Edition vs the Core Line. When to Spend Up.

The brand’s own framing is the honest one. Dialed In president Max Vansluys put it this way in the Massachusetts launch coverage: the classic line gives consumers something they can rely on, while the seasonal and strain-specific collaborations showcase the work of local growers. The core tins are the dependable buy, same dose structure, same texture, rotating but crowd-safe flavors. The collabs are where the brand shows off.

Spend up when the hash maker matters to you, when the cross on the label is one you would buy as flower, or when you want the version of this product that justifies the whole rosin-first pitch. Stay with the core line when you want repeatability, or when the only drop on the shelf is a flavor pairing you do not love, because a collab tin you do not enjoy is just an expensive tin. Our full Dialed In Gummies review covers the core line and the brand’s identity in more depth.

For adjacent shelves: the Wyld Elderberry 2:1 CBN gummies are the mainstream distillate counterpoint for sleep buyers, Twenty-Two K Edibles plays a similar premium game without the batch rotation, and the top cannabis brands in Colorado roundup shows where Dialed In sits in the state’s larger bench. More single-product breakdowns live in our product reviews hub.

Best For, Skip If. The Short Version.

Best for:

  • Hash-first buyers who care which hands pressed the rosin and want the cross printed on the label
  • Flavor chasers who want pairings designed around a specific batch instead of a fixed candy lineup
  • Anyone who reads lab data, since the QR-per-batch system actually delivers it
  • Colorado shoppers who enjoy the drop culture and can move fast when a run lands

Skip if:

  • You want the cheapest 100 milligrams in the store; the core line or a value brand beats the collab price every time
  • You live outside Colorado, since most drops never cross the state line
  • You want the same flavor every month; the batch you love will retire, and its replacement will be different on purpose

Questions People Ask About the Drops.

What are Dialed In limited edition gummies?

They are rotating small-batch collab tins. Each run pairs one hash maker’s rosin with a custom two-flavor combination, gets a numbered batch, and retires when it sells through. Recent Colorado examples include Percolate on a Soap x Runtz rosin and Bicycle Day with Boulder Built on a Project 4516 x The Soap.

Why do Dialed In gummies have batch numbers?

Every production run is pressed from a specific rosin lot, so the number ties your tin to that run’s cannabinoid and terpene results, which the QR code on the package opens directly. Dispensary menus sometimes omit the number, but the tin always shows it.

How strong are Dialed In limited edition gummies?

In Colorado a tin holds ten gummies at 10 milligrams of full-spectrum rosin each, 100 milligrams total. Missouri runs 300 milligram tins. The input rosin tests batch by batch; the Pink Clovers batch listed a 74.45 percent THC rosin on Leafly.

How much do Dialed In limited edition tins cost?

Around Denver in spring 2026 I paid $24 to $28 per collab tin, against $20 to $22 for the core line. Core tins discount hard around 4/20, while the limited drops sell through at full price.

Where can you buy Dialed In limited edition drops?

Dialed In sells in Colorado, Arizona, Massachusetts, Missouri, and Ohio, but most collab drops are Colorado-only and sell out fast. The brand announces each drop and its stockists on its site and social feeds, and the batch info pages resolve by state.

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