The wild side of the indomitable goat swirling with the learthery darkness of the mountain roads. Mushrooms and truffles conjur the habitat; and the dirty, bestial, almost aggressive side of the creature is felt through goat's milk, costus and oud. An earthy, woody, animalic fragrance denoting strength and virility.
All about this fragrance
Vibe check
This is a scent for close quarters and rough edges: a dark coat, cold air, damp earth underfoot, and a presence that feels more instinctive than polished. It suits someone who wants their fragrance to read as raw, tactile and a little unsettling rather than merely stylish.
How to wear
Best in cool weather, where its leather, oud and animalic facets can breathe without turning harsh. Apply lightly at first; a few sprays are enough, as the scent has moderate projection and a long, steady drydown. On skin it can feel milky, earthy and fur-like, with the woods and leather becoming more pronounced in dry air.
Who it’s for
For wearers who enjoy animalic leathers, earthy woods and unconventional compositions with a rough, tactile edge. It will appeal to those who like fragrances that feel primal, textured and slightly confrontational, with mushroom, truffle and lactonic notes adding strangeness to the darkness.
Release year
2021
The nose
Laurent Marrone. Marrone is known for bold, character-driven compositions that lean into texture, contrast and a certain unruly realism. In Goat, that approach is clear: the fragrance is built to feel unusual and surprising, turning goat’s milk, mushroom and truffle into a vivid animalic portrait rather than a polished pastoral scene.
Collaborators
Wolf Brothers’ founders Wiktor and Szymon Wilk shaped the brand’s primal, Slavic forest concept and the “Animals of the Polish Forest” series, providing the creative frame that guided Goat’s wild, untamed brief.
Wolf Brothers’s story
Wolf Brothers is a Polish house built around raw nature, animal symbolism and a deliberately forceful aesthetic. Its fragrances trade in forest imagery, instinct and pack mentality, using bold materials and a slightly ironic macho tone to create scents that feel untamed rather than refined.
Goat’s concept
Goat belongs to Wolf Brothers’ “Animals of the Polish Forest” series, inspired by wild animals in Poland’s Bieszczady Mountains. The fragrance was conceived as an unusual, surprising portrait of the animal’s wild side, with goat’s milk, mushroom and truffle evoking habitat and costus, oud and leather pushing the composition into dirty, beastly territory.
Extra info
GOAT is part of Wolf Brothers’ forest-animal series, alongside scents such as Wolf, Deer, Wisent, Bear and Boar. Reviews often describe it as bizarre yet compelling, with a surprisingly faithful goat-habitat effect rather than pure shock value.
The wild side of the indomitable goat swirling with the learthery darkness of the mountain roads. Mushrooms and truffles conjur the habitat; and the dirty, bestial, almost aggressive side of the creature is felt through goat's milk, costus and oud. An earthy, woody, animalic fragrance denoting strength and virility.
All about this fragrance
Vibe check
This is a scent for close quarters and rough edges: a dark coat, cold air, damp earth underfoot, and a presence that feels more instinctive than polished. It suits someone who wants their fragrance to read as raw, tactile and a little unsettling rather than merely stylish.
How to wear
Best in cool weather, where its leather, oud and animalic facets can breathe without turning harsh. Apply lightly at first; a few sprays are enough, as the scent has moderate projection and a long, steady drydown. On skin it can feel milky, earthy and fur-like, with the woods and leather becoming more pronounced in dry air.
Who it’s for
For wearers who enjoy animalic leathers, earthy woods and unconventional compositions with a rough, tactile edge. It will appeal to those who like fragrances that feel primal, textured and slightly confrontational, with mushroom, truffle and lactonic notes adding strangeness to the darkness.
Release year
2021
The nose
Laurent Marrone. Marrone is known for bold, character-driven compositions that lean into texture, contrast and a certain unruly realism. In Goat, that approach is clear: the fragrance is built to feel unusual and surprising, turning goat’s milk, mushroom and truffle into a vivid animalic portrait rather than a polished pastoral scene.
Collaborators
Wolf Brothers’ founders Wiktor and Szymon Wilk shaped the brand’s primal, Slavic forest concept and the “Animals of the Polish Forest” series, providing the creative frame that guided Goat’s wild, untamed brief.
Wolf Brothers’s story
Wolf Brothers is a Polish house built around raw nature, animal symbolism and a deliberately forceful aesthetic. Its fragrances trade in forest imagery, instinct and pack mentality, using bold materials and a slightly ironic macho tone to create scents that feel untamed rather than refined.
Goat’s concept
Goat belongs to Wolf Brothers’ “Animals of the Polish Forest” series, inspired by wild animals in Poland’s Bieszczady Mountains. The fragrance was conceived as an unusual, surprising portrait of the animal’s wild side, with goat’s milk, mushroom and truffle evoking habitat and costus, oud and leather pushing the composition into dirty, beastly territory.
Extra info
GOAT is part of Wolf Brothers’ forest-animal series, alongside scents such as Wolf, Deer, Wisent, Bear and Boar. Reviews often describe it as bizarre yet compelling, with a surprisingly faithful goat-habitat effect rather than pure shock value.