👥 Real people, never bots • ⚡ Starts instantly • 🔒 No password needed • ♾️ Lifetime refill • 🎧 Every drop reaches real fans
🎧 You drop a track, and the notification goes out to almost nobody
You finally uploaded it. The mix is right, the cover art is right, the release is live on the platform that Africa actually streams on. Then you check the numbers a few hours later and barely anything moved. A handful of plays, one comment if you are lucky. It is not the song. It is that your artist profile only has a small following, so when Boomplay pings people about your new upload, it pings almost nobody. Every artist who has ever released music on a small profile knows this exact moment: you did the work, and the platform simply has no one to tell.
Followers are the fanbase your next release launches into
A follower on Boomplay is someone who chose your profile and now gets told the moment you drop something new. That is different from a play, which just counts one listen on one song, and different from a like, which is a one-time nod of approval. A follower sticks around across every release you ever put out. So the number sitting on your profile is really your day-one reach for whatever you upload next, this month, next month, two years from now. A small number means every new track starts from zero. A real following means each drop opens in front of people who are already primed to hit play.
Why artists actually build this number up
The reasons are rarely about vanity alone. A visible following makes you look like an artist worth a feature or a co-sign, which matters when someone is deciding whether to collaborate or offer a deal, since nobody wants to be the first to bet on an empty profile. Some artists are watching peers in their scene climb past them and want their profile to reflect the work they are actually putting in, not lag behind it. Others have a release coming and want the profile to already look active, so new listeners who click through do not bounce off a page that looks abandoned. Underneath all of it is the same drive: turn an upload into an actual event instead of a file sitting quietly on a server.
🛡️ The honest answer to what worries artists after they buy
Two questions come up once someone is close to ordering, and both deserve a straight answer. The first is whether these are real accounts or just bot filler that Boomplay quietly strips out later, which would defeat the entire point and make an artist look worse in front of a label or collaborator. They are real people, not bots. The second is whether this actually helps, and here is the honest limit: a bigger following puts your next drop in front of more real people the moment it goes up. It cannot make a weak track blow up, and it will not replace putting out music people want to hear. What it does is remove the zero-audience problem, so your actual songs get a fair first look instead of launching into silence.
Real people, never bots, and nothing that risks your profile
We do not use bot accounts, ever, because a following built on fake profiles is the exact thing that makes labels and fellow artists distrust a number. What you get instead are real accounts following your profile the same way an organic fan would. We only need your profile link, never your login, so your account stays entirely in your hands. Delivery starts instantly after you order, and a lifetime refill protects the number for as long as the profile is yours, so the fanbase you build here is one you keep.
Frequently Asked Questions
A follower is someone attached to your artist profile who gets notified the next time you upload. That means your future releases start with a real, ready audience instead of launching to nobody, which is the main thing a small profile is missing.
No, they measure different things. A play counts one listen on one specific song, and a like is a one-time approval on a track. A follower is attached to your whole profile and carries forward into every release you put out after this one.
Yes. Every follower comes from an actual person running a real Boomplay account, not a bot or an empty shell profile. That matters because a following built from real accounts is what holds up when a label, promoter, or collaborator checks your profile.
No, never. All we need is the link to your public artist profile. Real people follow it exactly the way an organic fan would, so your login and your account settings are never touched at any point in the order.
They start landing on your profile shortly after checkout. Smaller orders wrap up quickly, while larger follower counts take longer to complete in full, since a big number rolling in all at once would look unnatural rather than organic.
Yes. Every follower is a real account, not a bot, so there is no fake-account pattern behind your profile.
A stronger following makes your profile look like an active artist worth the risk of a feature or a deal, which is often the first filter before anyone even listens closely. It opens that door; the music itself still has to close it.
A larger following raises how many real people see your profile activity and get pinged about new uploads, which is a genuine part of getting discovered. It works alongside your music, not instead of it, so pairing it with actual releases is what moves the needle.
Yes, for as long as you own the profile. Every follower you buy is backed by a lifetime refill, so the number you paid for is topped back up free any time it is needed, no expiry date attached. This is a single purchase we stand behind for good, not a subscription you renew.
Enough that your profile stops reading as brand new the moment someone clicks in, and that your next upload has an actual audience waiting rather than starting at zero. Artists releasing regularly, or angling for label attention, often aim higher to match the profiles they are being compared against.

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