👥 Real people, never bots • ⚡ Starts fast • 🔒 No password needed • ♾️ Lifetime refill • 💚 Proof the track got kept
💚 The plays come in, but the heart stays empty
You check the song page and the stream count is climbing, so at first it feels like the track is working. Then you notice the like count sitting near zero, and it changes the read entirely. People are pressing play, some finishing the whole song, but almost nobody taps the heart on the way out. That is the quiet gap between a track that gets heard and one that gets kept. A stream can be a passive skip-past or someone’s shuffle grabbing it for thirty seconds. A like is different. It is a listener stopping to say this one is worth saving. When that number stays flat while plays rise, the song reads as forgettable the moment anyone scrolls past it, no matter how good the plays look.
A like is the listener choosing to keep the song, not just hear it
On Boomplay, tapping the heart on a track does two things at once. It saves the song to the listener’s own favorites, genuinely their choice, not an accident of autoplay. And it adds to the public like count sitting right on the song page, visible to anyone who lands there next. That second part turns a private habit into social proof. A high stream count only tells a visitor the song got clicked. A high like count tells them the song got chosen, again and again, by people who could have moved on and did not. That is the number that separates real traction from a track that simply autoplayed its way to some plays.
Why artists actually chase this number
The reasons trace back to wanting proof the music landed, not just played. A song with heavy plays but almost no likes leaves artists uneasy, since it hints the audience is passing through rather than connecting, and that uncertainty stings worse than a low number outright. Others watch a rival drop a track that racks up hearts fast and want their own release to hold its own next to it, since fans and playlist curators size up two songs by more than raw play count. Some are staring down a new single with plays trickling in and want early proof, fast, that people are not just sampling it and moving on. Every version lands in the same place: turn passive streams into a visible sign the song is actually connecting.
🛡️ The question every artist asks before ordering, answered straight
Once someone is ready to buy, two things come up. First, whether the likes come from genuine listeners. They do, real Boomplay users tapping the heart the same way any fan would on a song they enjoy, not automated accounts standing in for real ears. Second, whether a stronger like count changes anything beyond the page itself. It gives your track the same social proof a genuinely loved song carries, so a new listener or curator reads real approval instead of a flat number. What it will not do is make a weak track land with people who hear it. The likes show the song is worth a listen; the song still has to hold that listener once they press play.
Real listeners, and nothing that risks the song’s page
Every bad story about bought engagement traces back to bot accounts, and we leave them out entirely. What you get are real people tapping the heart on your track, arriving at a steady pace so the count builds the way genuine interest would, never all at once. All we need is the song link, never your Boomplay login or password. Buying likes this way sits in Boomplay’s terms of service, not criminal territory, and since every tap comes from a real account, there is nothing artificial in the like itself for the platform to flag.
Frequently Asked Questions
Tapping the heart on a track saves it to that listener’s own favorites and adds one to the public like count shown on the song page. It is a record of someone choosing to keep the track, visible to anyone who visits that page afterward.
Yes. Each like comes from a genuine Boomplay user tapping the heart on your track, the same action any real fan takes on a song they enjoy. No automated accounts or empty profiles are used to generate the count.
A play counts each time the track is streamed, including quick skips and background listening. A like only happens when a listener actively chooses to save the song, so it measures who genuinely connected with it rather than how often it simply got clicked.
No. We only need the link to your track. Your login, email, and account settings are never asked for, so the order cannot touch anything beyond the like count on that one song.
The first likes land within minutes of ordering, then the rest continue at a steady pace rather than arriving in one burst. A small order is done within a day, while a bigger count spreads out over several days so the growth looks like real listener activity.
A strong like count is one of the signals a curator checks alongside plays, since it points to a track people actively chose over one they merely streamed once. It earns the track a fair listen; holding a curator’s attention once they press play is still on the song.
It falls under Boomplay’s terms of service, not criminal law, and it is common practice among independent artists building a catalog. Because every like comes from a real account, there is nothing artificial in the tap itself for the platform to take issue with.
Likes give your track the visible proof that a genuinely loved song carries, which helps a new listener or curator take it seriously. They cannot make a track connect with people who hear it. The song still needs to hold the listener once the like brings them in.
The count you order is protected for as long as the track stays on your account, not only on delivery day. If it ever dips below what you paid for, we add the difference back at no cost, for good, with no renewal fee and no yearly re-buy.
Enough that the song does not read as one nobody has connected with next to its play count. A few hundred moves a fresh release past that first impression, while artists competing in a busy genre often build higher to match the tracks curators are comparing it against.

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