>>8928112I go to restaurants and fast food places that basically just say "food", yes.
I'm sure reviews exist (not for new places), and an ingredient list must be provided by law in some states if asked for, but with chemicals, do you really ever look at the ingredients or understand what they mean? Most people don't, especially people on /toy/ who buy hobby paints written in Japanese.
Do you even know how many people apply solvents and solvent-based paints that can harm plastics, just because they're ignorant, even when there are written warnings in English? Shit there are even people who buy them anyway, knowing those warnings exist, because some guy on the internet said it didn't melt his plastic. Hell, there's a thread this past week where people were suggesting non-acetone nail polish remover where the guy ruined his toy using it.
Anyway, point is if something is labeled to do something, it likely will do it, because whoever is making it wants to make money and have return business. Just like any restaurant.
Is there a chance it's shit or is purely snake oil? Sure, but that's with everything. How many fast food hamburgers have you eaten where you wouldn't eat again? How many gold plated HDMI connectors do you own?
Whoever made this Elixir is just aiming to sell a ready made product for the same dumb people who buy Future floorshine (which doesn't exist anyore), because they're too stupid and lazy just to use a glossy acrylic and mix that with alcohol. People like ready made products.
PS, acetone can be used on plastics without harming the plastics (following careful instructions).