That really depends on you. And we're not kidding.
A few years ago, chemists discovered that the nose is sometimes hypersensitive to sulfur odors. The culprit, as it turns out, is a metallic binding partner that amplifies the signal of smelly thiol molecules.
A thiol is any organosulfur compound of the form R−SH, where R represents an alkyl or other organic substituent. Thiols are the sulfur analogue of alcohols - the smelly part of the sulfur.
The human nose can be particularly sensitive to sulfur compounds. Hypersensitivity is caused by copper, the metallic binding partner. Roughly half of the world's population has lots of copper particles in their nasal mucus. The other half have very little or no copper in their nasal mucus. It's genetic – in our DNA!
Copper amplifies a thiol's intensity by up to 1,000 times. If you have lots of copper in your nasal mucus you'll not like the smell of our soap. If you don't, the soap smells fine. There's a vast range in how people smell sulfur.