👥 Real people, never bots • ⚡ Starts instantly • 🔒 No password needed • ♾️ Lifetime refill • 💜 Notes on the post you choose
💜 You post it, refresh the tab, and the heart count does not move
You spent time on it. Maybe it is a photo set, an edit, a long text post you rewrote twice. You hit post, and then you do the thing everyone does: you check back in ten minutes. Still zero. An hour later, still zero. The post is not bad, it is just sitting on a dashboard with no hearts under it, which is the one thing that makes a stranger scrolling past decide it is worth a second look. A note count stuck at zero reads as a post nobody has vouched for yet, so people keep scrolling instead of stopping.
A like is a small vouch that a specific post is worth a second look
On Tumblr, a like sits on that one post, not on your blog as a whole. It tells anyone who lands on it that another real person already stopped and approved of this exact thing. Tumblr’s dashboard and search also lean on that kind of engagement to decide what keeps surfacing, so a post with some hearts under it has a better shot at being noticed again than one with none. The like count is also the first thing a visitor’s eye catches before they read a single line, so it sets the tone for how the post gets read.
Why people actually buy likes for a post
Most of the reasons trace back to one thing: a good post deserves better than silence. Some are launching a new blog and want the first few posts to look like real people have already found them, instead of the blank-slate look that makes a new visitor keep moving. Others have a specific post, an edit, a fandom piece, a photo set, that they know is strong and just want it to get the notice it earns rather than get buried under newer posts before anyone sees it. A few are rebuilding after a slow stretch and want a post to look active again so it has a real shot at catching on. The thread running through all of it is simple: they believe in the post and want the numbers to reflect that from the start.
💭 The worry after you order, answered straight
Two questions come up once someone is ready to buy, and both deserve a straight answer. First, are these real people. Yes, every like comes from a genuine Tumblr account, the same kind that likes any post organically, never a bot profile that gets swept away later. Second, will it actually work. Likes give a post the visible approval that makes a new visitor stop scrolling and read it, which is exactly what a quiet post is missing. What they will not do is turn a weak post into a strong one. The likes get people to stop and look; the post itself has to hold their attention once they do.
Real accounts, and nothing that puts your blog at risk
Most of the bad stories about bought engagement come from bot farms, throwaway accounts that vanish the moment a platform cleans house. We do not use them. Every like you get comes from a real Tumblr account acting the way any organic like would, landing on the exact post you choose. All we need is the post link, never your login, so your account settings stay completely untouched. Delivery starts instantly once you order, and a lifetime refill holds your count in place, so if any of it ever drops, we put it back free for as long as the post is yours.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. You give us the direct link to that post, and the likes land on that exact piece of content, not spread across your blog or attached to a different post. It works for a single photo set, an edit, or a text post you want noticed.
Likes are visible to anyone who opens the post and checks the note count, and your own list of liked posts is public by default under your blog settings unless you have switched that specific list to private. The like count itself always shows.
Yes. Each one comes from an actual person running a genuine Tumblr blog, not an automated or bot profile. It is the same type of account that would like your post organically while scrolling their dashboard.
No, never. All we ask for is the link to the post you want liked. Real accounts visit that link and like it the same way any reader would, so your login and account settings are never touched at any point.
Delivery starts instantly after you order. A small batch usually lands within a few hours, while a larger order spreads out over a day or more so the notes build up in a natural pattern instead of jumping all at once.
Yes. Because every like comes from a real account rather than a bot, there is nothing artificial for Tumblr to flag on the post itself.
Yes. Notes on Tumblr combine likes, reblogs, and replies into one running total shown under the post, and a like adds directly to that number. More notes overall makes the post read as more talked about.
A like is a private vouch that shows in the note count but stays on the original post. A reblog actually copies the post onto someone else’s blog for their followers to see, spreading it further. Buying likes builds the approval signal on that one post rather than redistributing it elsewhere.
Yes. Every like you buy is covered by a lifetime refill, so the number you paid for is locked in as yours for as long as you own that post. Should the count ever slip, we top it back up at no extra charge, no expiry date and no renewal fee.
A strong post with zero notes still looks unproven to someone scrolling past, since most people judge a post by its note count before they decide to actually read it. Likes give that first nudge of visible approval so a genuinely good post gets the read it deserves instead of getting scrolled past.



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