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Rocky Patel Sixty Sixty Review

The Rocky Patel Sixty Sixty is unapologetically massive—a birthday cigar that doesn't apologise for taking up space in your evening. Rocky turned sixty, rolled a 60-ring gordo, and aged the lot for two years post-roll before letting anyone near them. It's a medium-full cigar that leans into Mexican San Andrés wrapper over Nicaraguan guts, and the sheer physical heft means you're committed for the duration. Not a smoke for the indecisive.

★ 84 / 100
84/ 100 · OUR SCORE
A big-ring milestone smoke for the long evening
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Specs · sizes · what's in the box

Rocky Patel Sixty Sixty size, specs & box options

The Birthday Blend

Rocky Patel's sixtieth birthday warranted a cigar of matching proportions. Mexican San Andrés wraps Nicaraguan binder and filler—all of it aged two years after rolling. Box-pressed. Limited release. The kind of milestone smoke that demands you clear your calendar.

Size Matters

Six inches by sixty ring. This is not a lunch-break cigar. The gordo format stretches the smoking time well past ninety minutes, and the draw—when construction cooperates—channels espresso, cinnamon, leather, caramel. The ash holds long. The burn line wanders occasionally but corrects itself.

Value Proposition

At $286 for a box of twenty, you're paying for both the tobacco and the two-year post-roll ageing Rocky insists upon. That's roughly £14 per stick. Not cheap. But for a celebratory gordo with this much presence, the cost reflects the ambition.

Flavour journey · third by third

What does the Rocky Patel Sixty Sixty taste like?

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Reviewer verdict

The scorecard — how the Rocky Patel Sixty Sixty rates

Scored across 5 dimensions from a full hands-on burn.

Look & feel Pre-light Burn Flavor Experience
Look & feel
Pre-light
Burn
Flavor
Experience

I've smoked a lot of Rocky's birthday releases over the years, and the Sixty feels like the most refined. The Mexican San Andres wrapper brings grit—earthy, dark, unapologetic—but the Nicaraguan core smooths it into something balanced. At 90 minutes, this isn't a cigar you grab on a whim. It's a commitment. An evening smoke. Maybe two evenings if you're sensible about pace. The box-pressing helps with the burn; I had zero issues with tunneling or uneven ash.

That said, a 6x60 can get warm if you're impatient. I noticed it around the final third—puff too fast and you'll taste it. Not a dealbreaker, but worth mentioning. The two-year post-roll aging does work you can taste: the blend coheres instead of just layering flavors. Cedar doesn't fight with espresso; leather doesn't drown the sweetness. At $286, it's priced like a luxury smoke, which it is. You're paying for aged tobacco and Rocky's knack for milestone blends.

Construction is excellent—firm pack, sharp burn line, dense white ash that held past an inch. The band is almost comically long, wrapping the cigar like a billboard, but it peels off clean. Draw is open but controlled; you won't work hard for smoke. I did find one stick in my sample with a softer spot near the cap, though it didn't affect the burn. Box variation happens, even in premium releases. This is the kind of cigar you smoke slowly with whiskey and no agenda.

Who's this for? Anyone who likes big ring gauges and doesn't mind the time investment. If you enjoyed the Fifty or Fifty-Five, the Sixty is a natural next step—darker, richer, more complex. Medium-full body means it won't flatten beginners, but it's not a starter cigar either. It's celebratory, indulgent, and a little bit show-off. Rocky designed it to mark turning 60, and it feels like he meant it.

The honest verdict

Is the Rocky Patel Sixty Sixty the best in its class?

Two-year post-roll aging pays off

The flavors mesh instead of competing. Cedar, espresso, leather, cocoa—they orbit each other without clashing. You taste the time Rocky spent letting this tobacco marry. Medium-full body with real depth, not just strength for strength's sake. The San Andres wrapper adds earthy bite without bitterness.

A 6x60 can heat up if you rush it

This ring gauge demands patience. Push the pace and you'll taste warmth creeping in, especially toward the final third. It's not a flaw in the blend—it's physics. Slow down, let it breathe, and you're fine. But if you're a fast smoker, consider the Toro instead.

Big-ring veterans with time to spare

If you like gordo vitolas and appreciate aged Nicaraguan tobacco wrapped in Mexican San Andres, this is your cigar. Not for quick breaks or beginners. It's an evening event—pour something neat, settle in, and let the 90 minutes unfold. Fans of Rocky's other birthday releases will find this the most balanced yet.

Head to head

How the Rocky Patel Sixty Sixty compares

The Sixty Sixty sits in Rocky's premium tier—bigger ring gauge than most in the lineup, built for the anniversary crowd.

CigarSizeStrengthPer boxBest for
Rocky Patel Sixty SixtyThis reviewMost classic profile
Rocky Patel Number 6 SixtyRead review →Same brand, same 6x60 format, lighter on the wallet — a touch less refined but close in spirit. Sibling
Oliva Serie V Double ToroRead review →The obvious medium-full 60-ring rival. Earthier and bolder, and it costs a fair bit less per box. Cross-brand
Rocky Patel 20th Anniversary SixtyRead review →RP’s other big-ring milestone stick — more cocoa-forward, and noticeably cheaper by the box. Benchmark

Pairings

What to drink with the Rocky Patel Sixty Sixty

Occasions & gifting

Best occasions for the Rocky Patel Sixty Sixty

Long weekend evening

Perfect when you've got nowhere to be and two hours to kill. Pour something slow, put your phone away, and let this cigar stretch out. The size demands patience—reward yourself with the time it deserves.

Golf round / outdoors

A 6x60 is made for the links. Slow burn matches the pace of play, and the draw stays cool even in wind. Just don't rush it between shots—this one punishes hurried puffing.

Celebration

The 60th anniversary tribute carries weight—literally and symbolically. Hand these out when you want something memorable, not everyday. Big vitola makes a statement without screaming about it.

Final verdict

The bottom line on the Rocky Patel Sixty Sixty

I've smoked a lot of Rocky's birthday releases over the years, and the Sixty feels like the most refined. The Mexican San Andres wrapper brings grit—earthy, dark, unapologetic—but the Nicaraguan core smooths it into something balanced. At 90 minutes, this isn't a cigar you grab on a whim. It's a commitment. An evening smoke. Maybe two evenings if you're sensible about pace. The box-pressing helps with the burn; I had zero issues with tunneling or uneven ash.

That said, a 6x60 can get warm if you're impatient. I noticed it around the final third—puff too fast and you'll taste it. Not a dealbreaker, but worth mentioning. The two-year post-roll aging does work you can taste: the blend coheres instead of just layering flavors. Cedar doesn't fight with espresso; leather doesn't drown the sweetness. At $286, it's priced like a luxury smoke, which it is. You're paying for aged tobacco and Rocky's knack for milestone blends.

Construction is excellent—firm pack, sharp burn line, dense white ash that held past an inch. The band is almost comically long, wrapping the cigar like a billboard, but it peels off clean. Draw is open but controlled; you won't work hard for smoke. I did find one stick in my sample with a softer spot near the cap, though it didn't affect the burn. Box variation happens, even in premium releases. This is the kind of cigar you smoke slowly with whiskey and no agenda.

Who's this for? Anyone who likes big ring gauges and doesn't mind the time investment. If you enjoyed the Fifty or Fifty-Five, the Sixty is a natural next step—darker, richer, more complex. Medium-full body means it won't flatten beginners, but it's not a starter cigar either. It's celebratory, indulgent, and a little bit show-off. Rocky designed it to mark turning 60, and it feels like he meant it.

Questions

Rocky Patel Sixty Sixty FAQ

Is this the best Rocky Patel cigar?

"Best" depends on what you want—this ranks high for balance and occasion, but it's not the strongest or boldest. I'd call it top-tier for complexity and refinement in Rocky's range. If you want power, grab the Decade or Fifteenth Anniversary instead.

Which cigar is better, Rocky Patel Sixty Sixty vs Rocky Patel Vintage 1992?

Sixty Sixty wins for modern construction and fuller body—smoother, more layered, better for long sessions. Vintage 1992 is milder, more approachable, with that Connecticut smoothness. I'd smoke Sixty Sixty for an event, 1992 for a lazy afternoon.

Is this a good cigar for a long, leisurely evening smoke?

Absolutely—the 6x60 vitola is built for exactly that. You'll get two hours easy, maybe more if you're slow. The blend evolves nicely through three acts, so rushing it is a waste. Grab a drink, settle in.

How much is a box of Rocky Patel Sixty Sixty?

A box runs $286, which positions it in the premium-but-not-crazy zone for Rocky's anniversary releases. You're paying for the tribute pedigree and the size—worth it if you want something special without breaking into ultra-premium territory.

About the reviewer
James Peasley
General Manager, Online Cigars