Wonder first. Then… too much.
A rainbow world where everything feels deeper — colours louder, thoughts bigger, time bendier. TrippE shows how a trip can start magical… then tip into overwhelm. Miss K is the steady one: calm voice, safe space, gentle grounding.
Everything feels brighter
Planet Woah starts like a warm welcome — patterns, colour, connection. The world feels soft-edged. You laugh more. You notice everything. For a moment, it feels like you’ve stepped into a kinder version of reality.
Set & setting matter
Who you’re with and where you are can change the whole experience. If the environment turns chaotic, the trip can turn with it — quickly.
Thoughts get bigger, time gets bendier
The energy builds. Music feels textured. Conversations feel meaningful. It can be beautiful — but it also means small changes can feel huge.
A simple safety anchor
Agree a “safe mate” and a calmer spot before things get intense. If it starts feeling heavy, you already know where to go and who to stick with.
When “fun” becomes too much
The crowd feels louder. Lights feel sharper. Thoughts race. What was playful can become confusing — that’s your cue to slow everything down, not push through.
First moves that help
Reduce stimulation: quieter area, fewer people, softer light if possible. Keep reassurance simple. Small sips of water. Slow breathing.
This is where support matters most
TrippE looks lost — not “naughty”, not “dramatic” — just overwhelmed. This is the moment a calm mate changes everything: steady voice, steady presence, steady steps.
Red flags
Chest pain, collapse, seizure, overheating, extreme agitation, not responding normally, or struggling to breathe are all reasons to get urgent help.
Quiet space. Water. Breathe.
Miss K doesn’t lecture. She lowers the volume of the world. She keeps it simple: breathe together, sip water, reduce stimulation, stay with trusted people.
When to get help
If someone is unconscious, fitting, or not breathing normally: call 999. If you’re at a festival: go to welfare/medics early. Be honest about what was taken (and roughly when).
Coming back to yourself
The end isn’t chaos — it’s learning. Planet Woah reminds you: you can’t control everything you feel, but you can choose safer steps. Nobody gets left behind.
One line that matters
The safest harm reduction is not using drugs in the first place. If someone does choose to use: keep it simple, avoid mixing, prioritise safety and mates.
If it turns heavy, you don’t do it alone
Planet Woah can be beautiful — and unpredictable. The way back is simple: lower stimulation, breathe, hydrate steadily, stay with trusted people, and get help early if anything feels unsafe.
Miss K’s rule stands: calm beats chaos. Community beats panic.