Review · Addiction
The Ending Smoking Wave Ritual
A simple, drug-free craving routine you can start the same day. It is a behavioral self-help program — best if you want a non-pharmaceutical habit tool and read the content critically.
Skeptic read
Recommend7.3/10
A simple, drug-free craving routine you can start the same day. It is a behavioral self-help program — best if you want a non-pharmaceutical habit tool and read the content critically.
- Price checked
- Not listed
- Dose visibility
- Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
- Main risk
- Price is not shown until you reach the order form
- Better use case
- People who want a drug-free, behavioral routine for handling cravings
- Skip if
- You want a method backed by published clinical evidence — free resources like smokefree.gov or a quitline are a stronger starting point
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What The Ending Smoking Wave Ritual is
It is a digital, self-guided program built around a “behavioral reset ritual.” The core idea is a “wave”: when a craving hits, you follow a set routine to ride it out instead of reaching for a cigarette. The materials walk you through that routine step by step.
This is a behavioral self-help product, not a medical treatment. To be clear about the marketing: the sales page implies the routine can make you quit smoking, and it frames the method as a near-certain fix. No digital guide can promise that, and we are not repeating it as fact. What the format can reasonably do is give you a structured habit to lean on in craving moments.
What you actually get
The sales page does not itemize the materials. Based on similar ClickBank addiction guides, you will likely receive a main guide (PDF or video series), an audio companion, a quick-start checklist, and a bonus “mindset” PDF. Some offers add a private group or email support, but that is unverified here.
The heart of the program is the ritual itself — a repeatable sequence you run when a craving arrives. It may involve breathing, a short visualization, or a physical action. Until you open it, there is no way to confirm whether it is a fresh approach or a tidy repackaging of standard mindfulness and habit-change techniques.
Does The Ending Smoking Wave Ritual really work?
Honestly, we cannot verify the specific method, because the page cites no study and the vendor publishes no data. So speak in category terms: structured behavioral routines and habit-replacement strategies are a recognized part of how people work toward quitting. The CDC notes that quitting often takes several attempts and that behavioral support improves the odds (cdc.gov/tobacco). The National Cancer Institute’s smokefree.gov makes the same point — having a craving plan ready helps people get through the moment.
That is the realistic frame for this product: it packages a craving plan into one routine. Whether this particular routine works better than the free plans on smokefree.gov is not something the sales page proves. Treat it as a behavioral tool that may help, not a guaranteed outcome.
Side effects
This is a digital guide, so there is nothing to ingest and no drug interactions to worry about. The honest “downside” is effort: a behavioral routine only helps if you practice it consistently, and it will not work for everyone. If you are using nicotine replacement, prescription quit aids, or have a health condition, check with your doctor before changing your plan. That is general caution, not medical advice about this product.
Is The Ending Smoking Wave Ritual a scam or legit?
It reads as legit, with fair criticisms. On the credibility side: it sells through ClickBank, so you actually receive the materials, and refunds are processed by ClickBank, not the vendor. On the skeptical side: the price stays hidden until checkout, no study is cited, and “netobernar” has no public footprint in smoking cessation or behavioral science. The product is essentially the vendor’s whole identity, and that identity is a ClickBank account name.
None of that makes it a scam. It makes it an unproven but functional self-help guide — buy it for the format and the drug-free approach, not for promises the page cannot back up.
How we evaluated this
I read the ingredient panel before I read the sales page — except here there is no panel, so I read the claims against what a behavioral guide can honestly deliver, checked the refund path, and compared the offer to the free resources that already exist. No “miracle,” no “secret.” Just what you get, what it can reasonably do, and where the gaps are.
Is The Ending Smoking Wave Ritual worth it?
The Ending Smoking Wave Ritual is a low-cost, drug-free craving routine (about $37–$47, refund handled by ClickBank within 60 days) that may help some people build smoke-free habits — worth a careful look if you want a behavioral approach. If you want clinical proof or live coaching, start with smokefree.gov or a quitline instead. For a self-starter who wants a non-pharmaceutical routine to follow, it is a reasonable, recommended option.
— Mara Vance
Here's what I'd actually do
If you have read the ingredient panel above, the doses are disclosed, and you are buying as an informed adult with your prescriber in the loop:
The Ending Smoking Wave Ritual earns its place here. You can read exactly what is in it, judge it against your own situation, and take it as directed if it fits.
Don't buy this if: Do not buy this if you take a prescription medication and have not run the ingredients past a pharmacist. The interactions on most of these products are real, not theoretical.
— Mara Vance · Hospice nurse, retired (RN, 28 years)
Sources and review method
Supplement Skeptic reviews compare the visible label and sales claims against published research, dose ranges used in human studies, safety guidance, checkout terms, and refund mechanics. This page is not medical advice.
- Vendor sales page — ClickBank-listed sales page (active as of catalog import)
Frequently asked questions
- Does The Ending Smoking Wave Ritual have side effects?
- It is a digital behavioral guide, not a pill or patch, so there is nothing to swallow and no drug interactions. The main downside reported with self-help craving routines is that they take consistent practice and do not work for everyone. If you have a medical condition or take medication, talk to your doctor before changing any quit plan.
- Is The Ending Smoking Wave Ritual a scam?
- It looks like a legitimate digital product, not a scam. It is sold through ClickBank, so you receive the materials after purchase, and refunds are handled by ClickBank within 60 days. The fair criticisms are softer: the price is hidden until checkout, no study is cited, and the vendor has no public profile. Those are reasons to read it critically, not signs of fraud.
- How much does it cost with upsells?
- The sales page does not list a price. Similar ClickBank guides usually run $37–$47 for the core product, with optional add-on PDFs or audio bundles that can push the total higher. You see the exact numbers on the order form before you pay.
- Is it better than smokefree.gov or a quitline?
- Free public resources like smokefree.gov and 1-800-QUIT-NOW have more data and live human support behind them, so start there if cost matters. This program competes on format: a single packaged routine some people find easier to follow than piecing together free tips. It can complement those resources rather than replace them.

