'rri
Site Experience FeedbackApr 5, 2026
A little bittersweet to be ordering a product that I Had To Try when it's being discontinued. I want to enjoy hot peppers, but am not Quite as much a fan of the heat as I am the flavors, so I couldn't pass up some presumably Relatively mild Fiery Five jellybeans from a brand that's generally dead-on with the flavors it offers. If I'm not just typing into a void, I hope this suggestion could be passed along to the right people: to continue producing pepper-flavored beans, perhaps Pointedly Reduce the heat, and Market them as a flavorfully-faithful yet gentle opportunity for the spice-fearing to experience such flavors. It is a rather uncontested niche, and plays to Jelly Belly's gift with offering diverse and accurate flavors, to offer something in some ways Familiar, and in others Unique.
I was going to say https://www.jellybelly.com/beanboozled-fiery-five/c/890 should have a "see all products in this category" link right up top on the mobile site, but that's kind of what "shop online" scrolls the page to... I would expect a button with that label to lead to another page with partnered retailers or something.
The default sort of the items by Popular makes sense, but results in a jumble of form factors and quantities, with the exact distinguishing information within the product names offset by the basic product type and split across lines, e.g. BeanBoozled Fiery Five [← pushes what follows off to the side, by an amount that varies per-product] 1.6 oz Flip [there is a split to a new line here in the middle of a descriptive term] Top Box. My eyes glaze over a bit looking at similar colors and shapes on one side, and disorderly numbers and words for containers on the other, all surrounded in pure white with margins I'd call excessively padded.
I would suggest, on any page for only variants of one basic product (e.g. BeanBoozled Fiery Five), for that unchanging name to be displayed within each list item's card in slightly smaller/lighter text, and for the weight/form/count to be on a new line in more prominent text, perhaps on backgrounds with subtle colors (in a colorblind-friendly palette) and/or with outlines with vivid colors that bear significance to the types of items, perhaps alongside additional colored icons/badges for such descriptors that further aid quick recognition.