Lost Mary Nera Fullview 70K Review: Is This “Semi-Disposable” Actually Good?
When the UK announced its upcoming disposable vape ban, manufacturers started scrambling for alternatives. Lost Mary’s answer is the Nera Fullview 70K—a strange hybrid sitting somewhere between traditional disposables and refillable pod systems.
The concept is simple: keep the 800mAh rechargeable battery base, but make the 12mL pods replaceable. You get two pods in the box (24mL total), promising up to 70,000 puffs. After three weeks, I realized this “semi-disposable” approach is a regulatory workaround that, for some people,, it’s a better way to vape.
The Basics
The Nera Fullview 70K is essentially a replaceable pod system, but marketed as “disposable.” The 800mAh battery base stays with you; when pods run out, you buy new ones. That 70,000 puff capacity means you might go a month without buying a new device.
Smart compromise or awkward middle ground?
Unboxing: Better Than Expected

The packaging is typical Lost Mary—clean, colorful, looks expensive. Inside:
- Battery base with curved screen
- Two pre-filled 12mL pods
- User manual
- No USB-C cable (you’ll need your own)
First surprise: It’s more compact than I expected. Despite 24mL total capacity, the Nera Fullview feels closer to a small pod system than those bulky high-capacity disposables. The magnetic connection between pod and base is solid—there’s a definite “click” when it locks in.
The curved LED screen is the standout feature. Functional (showing battery and e-liquid levels) and attractive with subtle light effects. Lost Mary clearly wants this to look like a premium device, not another cheap disposable.
Design & Build Quality

The Nera Fullview uses a two-part design: permanent battery base plus replaceable pods. The transparent pod design (the “Fullview” namesake) lets you see exactly how much e-liquid remains—a feature I didn’t know I needed until I had it.
The weight in hand is just right—not heavy, but substantial enough to feel quality. The curved screen is readable at a glance, and the light effects are subtle enough not to be obnoxious in public.
The magnetic connection is strong. I’ve carried this in my pocket for three weeks without the pod accidentally detaching. The transparent tank does show condensation over time, but a quick wipe clears it up.
Pod replacement takes about 5 seconds. The magnetic design makes alignment foolproof—no threading, no guessing, just snap and go. The first pod lasted about 16 days, and swapping to the second made me truly appreciate this design’s convenience.

Technical Performance
The Mesh Coil
Lost Mary uses mesh coil design, which is the right choice for this capacity. Three weeks in, vapor production and flavor intensity remain consistent—no degradation, no burnt taste. The separate coil and e-liquid design (mentioned in specs) seems to help preserve flavor quality.
Dual Power Modes
Normal Mode: Standard draw, optimized for longevity
Turbo Mode: More vapor, more intensity, faster battery drain
I mostly use Normal mode for daily vaping, switching to Turbo when I want a stronger hit. The difference is noticeable but not dramatic—Turbo gives maybe 20-30% more vapor.
Battery Life
The 800mAh battery lasts me about 1.5-2 days of moderate use (150-200 puffs/day). USB-C charging takes roughly 45 minutes from empty to full.
Battery life isn’t the best (some devices do 2-3 days), but considering that 70,000 puff total capacity, you’re more likely to run out of e-liquid than battery.

Real-World Usage: Three Weeks
Daily Integration
The Nera Fullview has replaced both my daily pod system and my backup disposable. It’s compact enough for pocket carry, battery life is solid, and I don’t worry about running out of charge mid-day.
The unexpected benefit is the liberation of “not buying vapes.” Three weeks in, I haven’t even finished half of the second pod. Traditional disposables can’t match this “set it and forget it” experience (weekly replacement), and refillable devices can’t match it (buying e-liquid, filling manually).
Social Situations
The curved screen does draw attention. Friends have asked “What is that?” more than once. It’s a conversation starter, which may be good or bad depending on whether you want stealth or attention.
Pod Replacement Experience
The first pod ran out around day 16. Replacing it took 5 seconds—pull out old pod, new pod snaps into place, zero alignment guesswork. Even some dedicated pod systems don’t get it this right.
Flavor Testing (Three-Week Log)
I tested Watermelon Ice and Miami Mint flavors over three weeks.
Watermelon Ice
Week 1: Fresh, candy-sweet watermelon with moderate cooling. Not that brain-freeze cold, more like a gentle breeze.
Week 2: Flavor intensity held steady. The watermelon stayed consistent without developing that chemical aftertaste some disposables get around day 10.
Week 3: Slight fading around day 18, but still very enjoyable. The mesh coil definitely preserves flavor better than traditional coils.
All-Day-Vape Potential: High. Sweet but not cloying.
Miami Mint
Week 1: Clean, crisp mint with subtle sweetness underneath. Not medicinal or overpowering.
Week 2: Consistent performance. The mint stays fresh without becoming harsh.
Week 3: Still going strong. This flavor seems to have better longevity than fruit options.
All-Day-Vape Potential: Very high. Classic mint that doesn’t get old.
Flavor Summary
The mesh coil really does maintain flavor consistency well. That 70,000 puff design doesn’t lead to rapid flavor degradation—at least not in the first three weeks.
Value Analysis
The Math
| Device Type | Capacity | Price | Cost per 1K Puffs |
| Elf Bar BC5000 | 5,000 | $12.99 | $2.51 |
| Lost Mary MT15000 Turbo | 15,000 | $13.75 | $0.92 |
| Nera Fullview 70K | 70,000 | $19.99 | $0.29 |
Even if you only get 50,000 actual puffs (conservative estimate), that’s still $0.40 per 1,000 puffs—far below traditional disposables.
Hidden Value
The real value is not thinking about buying vapes for weeks. I haven’t made a vape purchase in three weeks, and I’m not even halfway through the second pod.
Competition Comparison
| Feature | Nera Fullview 70K | iJOY XP100K | RAZ Vue 50K |
| Puff Count | 70,000 | 100,000 | 50,000 |
| Battery | 800mAh | 600mAh | 900mAh + 420mAh pod |
| E-Liquid | 24mL (2 pods) | 40mL | 26mL |
| Screen | Curved LED | Standard LED | LED screen |
| Price | ~$19.99 | ~$19.99 | ~$19.99 |
| Replaceable | Pods | No | Pods |
The iJOY XP100K wins on pure capacity, but the Nera Fullview offers better value per dollar and more refined design. The RAZ Vue 50K’s dual-battery system is innovative, but Lost Mary’s execution feels more polished.

Buy / Don’t Buy Guide
Buy This If:
- You want convenience without waste — Replaceable pods reduce plastic vs. traditional disposables while keeping ease-of-use
- You hate constantly buying vapes — 70,000 puffs means weeks between purchases
- You want to see your e-liquid level — The Fullview design eliminates the “how much is left?” guessing game
- You want a premium-feeling device — The curved screen and solid build make this feel like a $40+ device
Don’t Buy This If:
- You want true pocket stealth — The curved screen draws attention; this isn’t a “hide in your hand” device
- You prefer refillable systems — At $19.99 plus replacement pods, this is still more expensive long-term than a refillable pod kit
- You need instant gratification — While availability is improving, replacement pods aren’t as ubiquitous as standard disposables yet
- You’re on a tight budget upfront — $19.99 is more than double a standard disposable, even if per-puff cost is lower
Final Verdict
Rating: 8.5/10
The Lost Mary Nera Fullview 70K isn’t trying to be the biggest or flashiest high-capacity disposable. Instead, it focuses on execution: a thoughtful design bridging convenience and sustainability, wrapped in a premium package.
What It Gets Right:
- The curved screen adds real value (visibility)
- Replaceable pods reduce waste while maintaining ease-of-use
- Three-week flavor consistency is impressive
- Build quality feels premium for the price point
Where It Falls Short:
- No included USB-C cable feels cheap
- Replacement pod availability isn’t universal yet
- The curved screen, while attractive, reduces stealth factor
The Bottom Line:
If you’re looking for a high-capacity device that doesn’t feel like a disposable, the Nera Fullview 70K delivers. It’s a rare product that feels designed with user feedback in mind, rather than spec-sheet competition. For $19.99, it’s one of the better values in the high-capacity category.

