Chemical dependence is only half the story. The rest lives in your head and your schedule. Ask someone who has used pouches for years whether they are "addicted", and they will often answer with a blend of chemistry and identity: "I am a pouch user. This is just what I do now."
Pouches are incredibly easy to fold into your routine. You can line them up with coffee breaks, commutes, work blocks, gaming sessions, training, or winding down in the evening. Over time, those pairings become automatic. Coffee means a pouch. Driving means a pouch. Watching a match means a pouch. The psychological comfort is as real as the chemical one. Even if your body could tolerate a day off without too much protest, your brain will still nudge you with a quiet "this is where we usually do that thing."
There is also a control story that many users tell. Compared to smoking, pouches feel tidier, quieter, more deliberate. You are not leaving ash everywhere, you are not stepping outside mid-conversation, you are not advertising your habit to the whole room. That sense of regaining control over the messier parts of nicotine can make the underlying dependency feel less threatening. You can convince yourself that because the format looks clean, the attachment behind it must be cleaner too.
From the outside, though, the question is simple: what happens if you stop? If the idea of going a full day without a pouch makes you unreasonably irritable just thinking about it, the addiction is not purely theoretical. It is wired into your mood, your patience, and your sense of normality.