👥 Real people, never bots • ⚡ Starts fast • 🔒 No password needed • ♾️ Lifetime refill • 🎉 Makes your event look like something
🎉 You check your own event and the Going count reads like nobody’s coming
You built the page properly. Cover photo, time, location, a description you rewrote twice. Then you look at the number next to Going and it says 2. Maybe your co-host and one cousin. Everyone else you invited is still parked in Interested, or hasn’t touched the page at all. You know fifty people are probably coming. Facebook does not know that, and neither does anyone landing on the page cold. They see a 2 next to Going and read the whole event as quiet, maybe not worth clearing an evening for. That is the problem with a thin Going count: it is the first honest-looking number on the page, and right now it is lying in the wrong direction.
Going is the commitment signal, not the maybe pile
Facebook splits responses into two buckets for a reason. Interested is a soft tap, the digital shrug of sounds cool, we will see. Going is a person telling their own friends, in their own feed, that they will physically be there, and it carries weight Interested never will because it reads as a decision already made. A healthy Going count does two things at once. It signals to Facebook’s feed that real people are committing, which helps the event surface to more of the people you invited and their friends. And it tells every fence-sitter who visits that this is a real event with real people locked in, not a listing floating in the void. People commit to events other people are already committing to. Going is the number that makes that happen.
Why organizers actually buy this
The reasons trace back to that exact moment of opening the page and seeing almost nothing. Some are running a first event and know the chicken-and-egg problem cold: nobody wants to be the first name on an empty list, so the list stays empty until somebody breaks it. Others are watching a rival’s event nearby show a Going count in the hundreds and know which one a customer clicks first. Some have real guests confirmed by text and DM, dozens of them, and just want the public page to finally reflect that. The goal is never to fool people already coming. It is to stop the page from talking the undecided ones out of it.
🛡️ What people ask before they commit to this, answered straight
Two questions come up every time. First, whether the responses look fake next to guests you actually know. They will not, since these are real accounts marking Going the same way any invited guest does. Second, whether this replaces real attendance, and here is the honest limit. A strong Going count removes the doubt over whether anyone is actually coming, the exact thing that stops people from committing. It cannot make someone show up to an event they were never going to like, and Going is not the same as a ticket sale. It puts your event in front of more feeds and makes the page look worth clearing a Saturday for. You are buying the credibility that gets people to commit; the event still has to earn the turnout.
Real accounts, nothing that makes your event look staged
Every bad story about bought event responses traces back to bot accounts that never look like a real guest. We leave them out completely. Every Going response comes from a genuine Facebook account, the same kind that would RSVP to a friend’s birthday. Your login is never touched, we only need the public event link. A lifetime refill also backs each order, holding your Going count in place and replacing anything that slips, for as long as the event page exists.
Frequently Asked Questions
Interested is a soft, low-commitment tap that just means someone noticed the event. Going is a person telling their own network they will actually be there. Going carries far more weight with both visitors and Facebook’s feed, since it reads as a real decision instead of a maybe.
Yes. Each one is an actual person on a normal, active profile, never an automated or bot account. Because they are genuine users, the responses sit naturally beside the real names on your guest list instead of standing out as odd additions.
Yes, because the responses come from real people rather than obvious bot profiles, so there is nothing visually off for a guest to notice. A guest scrolling the guest list sees ordinary accounts, the same way they would for any event with real attendance.
Yes. A climbing Going number reads to the feed as genuine momentum, so Facebook is more likely to resurface the event to the people you invited and the friends connected to them. A near-empty count gives it little reason to keep circulating it.
No. We only need the public link to your event page. Real accounts visit that link and mark Going on their own, exactly as any guest would, so your account settings and password are never touched.
They start landing on your event within hours of ordering and continue at a steady pace after that. Smaller orders are usually done within a day, and larger counts complete a little after, so you can plan around a launch date or an ad push with a realistic window.
Yes. The responses come from real, active accounts rather than bots, so nothing on the page looks artificial or gives Facebook a reason to step in. Your login is never involved, since we work only from the public event link, and a lifetime refill keeps the count steady.
No, and we will not pretend otherwise. A strong Going count removes the doubt that stops fence-sitters from committing and gets your event in front of more feeds, but it cannot make someone attend an event they were never interested in. The count builds credibility; your event still has to earn the turnout.
No, they are separate things. Going is a public RSVP inside Facebook, while a ticket sale happens on whatever platform you sell tickets through. A strong Going count makes people more likely to take that next step, but it is not the sale itself.
Every Going response you order is protected for as long as your event page is up, no expiry date attached. Should the count ever slip below what you bought, we add the difference back at no charge. It is a one-time order we stand behind, not a subscription that bills again.



Isabella –
team is very dedicated