👥 Real people, never bots • 🔄 Spread across recent posts • ⚡ Starts instantly • 🔒 No password needed • ♾️ Lifetime refill
🔥 They are not judging one post, they are scrolling five
Somebody clicks through to your profile or page, and they do not read one post and leave. They scroll. Post, post, post, each one passing under their thumb for half a second while they decide what kind of account this is. If that scroll turns up a zero, then another zero, then maybe a single lonely like, the verdict forms fast: nobody here is watching. It does not matter that last month’s post did fine, or that one great post two weeks ago pulled real numbers. What they see is the run of recent posts sitting untouched right now, and a graveyard of empty posts reads as an account nobody follows anymore, whether or not that is true.
What spreading likes across recent posts actually does
This is not a single post getting a boost. It is your last several posts each picking up real likes, so the pattern down your feed changes from patchy to consistent. A visitor scrolling your profile is not scoring you on your best post, they are forming an impression from the average of what they scroll past, and a feed where every recent post shows some engagement reads as an account people actually watch. That consistency also matters to Facebook’s own ranking, since posts with early reactions tend to get shown to more of your existing audience before the window closes, so a feed of well-liked recent posts keeps giving your next update a better starting push too.
Why people spread likes instead of just boosting one post
The instinct to load up a single post is common, and it is also the tell. A profile with one viral-looking post next to five untouched ones looks like it was gamed for a moment, not like it is genuinely active. People choose to spread engagement across recent posts because they want the whole account to read as alive, not one lucky post to stand out against a quiet backdrop. It matters most right before someone checks you out on purpose, a new follower after a shoutout, a customer sizing up your page, since both judge the feed as a whole, not a single post you picked to look good.
🛡️ What people wonder once they have ordered, answered straight
The main question is whether this looks natural, and the honest answer is that spreading likes across several recent posts is exactly what makes it look natural, since a single post spiking to a huge number while the rest sit flat is what looks off. The other worry is whether the people liking are real, and here the line is firm: every like comes from a genuine account, not a bot or a hollow shell, the same kind of person who would like a post organically. What this cannot do is make a genuinely weak post land, since likes widen how many people notice a post, they do not rewrite what is on it. Good posts get a real lift; the content still has to earn the read.
Real people, and nothing that puts your account at risk
The bad reputation likes have online almost always traces back to bots, throwaway accounts that vanish overnight and leave the count looking hollow. We do not use them. Every like on your recent posts comes from a real person on a real Facebook account, delivered without ever touching your login, we only need your public post links or profile. Buying likes sits in Facebook’s terms of service, not criminal law, so treat it like any other marketing spend. Delivery starts within moments of ordering, and a lifetime refill locks in the number you bought, so if any of it naturally drops off over time, we quietly put it back at no cost, for as long as the account is yours.
Frequently Asked Questions
They spread across your recent posts rather than piling onto a single one. That is the point: a visitor scrolling your feed sees engagement on the last several posts instead of one loud post next to a run of empty ones.
Your most recent posts at the time of the order, generally your latest handful rather than your entire post history. Older posts further back in your feed are not included, since the goal is fixing what a visitor scrolls past first.
Real people, every time. Each like comes from a genuine Facebook account behind a real profile, the same kind of account that likes a post organically, never an automated or fake one.
No, because the likes land gradually across the posts rather than hitting all at once, which is what a normal wave of engagement from real people looks like. A pattern of steady numbers across several posts reads as organic, not staged.
The order covers the posts that were live when you bought it. A new post you publish afterward will not automatically be included, so time the order for after you have posted the content you want covered.
No. We only need the link to your profile or page and, where relevant, the specific posts. Real people visit and like exactly as any follower would, so your login is never requested and never touched.
Treat it as a normal marketing purchase.
Delivery starts within moments of your order going through, and the likes land across your recent posts on a steady schedule from there rather than in one sudden burst.
Both. Recent posts on a personal profile and recent posts on a business Page can each be covered, as long as the posts are set to public so real people are able to view and like them.
It adds real likes to that post as part of your recent run, so it no longer sits at zero. What it will not do is force people to comment or share off the back of a like alone, since that still comes down to whether the post itself holds their interest.



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