Although continuously producing the Take 5 using the original ingredients, The Hershey Company also produced several variations of the Take 5 after its initial release in 2004: •
Chocolate Cookie – Substitutes a chocolate cookie to replace the pretzel •
Marshmallow (limited edition) – Substitutes a
marshmallow creme to replace the caramel • Peanut butter – Has a peanut butter coating instead of milk chocolate •
White chocolate – Has a white chocolate coating instead of milk chocolate The wrappers for these Take 5 variations show the ingredient substitutions. At the beginning of 2016, Hershey partnered with a panel of "diverse millennial-aged students" to design a new wrapper and logo for the candy as part of a comeback campaign. (Advertising for Take 5 had been cut in 2011, due to Hershey struggling to find the best way to market the brand.) The new wrapper had a black background with ringed gray stripes and a new lime green logo. According to Take 5's brand manager, the new marketing campaign would focus on targeting
millennials. The brand also used
Twitter,
Facebook, and
Tumblr to revitalize its name. In June 2019, the candy was renamed to Reese's Take 5 and underwent a packaging change, with the primary color of the package changing from black to orange Also in June 2019, Hershey released that the ingredient peanut butter in TAKE5 has always been Reese's Peanut Butter. Reese's Take 5 is sold as Reese's Overload in the UK ==Formulation changes==