👥 Real people watching live • 🔴 Fills your live viewer count • ⏱️ You pick how long they stay • 🔒 No password needed • ⚡ In your room within minutes
🔴 Live, and the counter says two
You planned it, set up the shot, told people the time, and went on air. A few minutes in, the number beside your broadcast still reads two, and one of those is your own second phone. Going live to nobody hurts in a way a quiet post never does, because it is happening right now, in front of whoever drops in. And the count works against you the whole time. Someone taps in, sees an empty room, and swipes away before you reach your first point. Your energy dips on camera as it happens, because you can feel the room is bare.
The number next to LIVE is what people judge first
A broadcast gets sized up while it is still running. Live views, concurrent viewers, the watching-now count, whatever you call it, that figure ticks in real time and everyone who arrives glances at it before they hear what you have to say. A busy room pulls more people in, the same way a packed shop makes the next person step inside while an empty one makes them keep walking. Facebook reads it too. A broadcast drawing a live crowd gives the feed a reason to show it to more people while it airs, so the count both greets the visitors you get and reaches the ones you have not met yet. An empty counter quietly turns away both.
Why people fill the room on purpose
The cold start is the trap of live. Nobody wants to be the only face in a broadcast, so the streams that most need viewers are the exact ones that struggle to gather any. Putting real viewers in the room breaks that loop. Someone launching a product, dropping news, or hosting a Q and A wants the room full in the opening minutes, because that is when the most people peek in and decide to stay or go. Regular broadcasters keep a steady base so their live never opens to silence. And plenty just want a crowd big enough that real visitors settle in and start typing, since a chat only warms up once the room feels watched.
🤔 The questions that land right after checkout
Live is a one-shot format, so the doubts are sharper. Will the viewers reach my broadcast, or turn up once it is over? Do they bail after a minute? Are they real people? Fair asks, so here are plain answers. You set two things: how many viewers join, and their watch time, from a short 15-minute window to a full three hours across a longer broadcast. They begin arriving within the first few minutes of you going on air, which is why you order as you start, not days ahead. They are real people, not the viewbot scripts Facebook hunts down. One honest limit: we lift the number in the room. Holding that crowd and turning it into real watch time still rides on the broadcast itself.
Real viewers, and the only thing we need from you
Almost every bad story about bought live viewers comes from two things: viewbots, and services that ask for too much access. Bot counts move wrong, jumping in odd steps while the chat stays dead, and they hand Facebook an easy flag. So we send real people on real accounts only, and both the head count and their watch time are yours to set. Access is the other line we hold. Your password stays yours, because watching a public broadcast needs nothing but the live link you already share, and the room fills within minutes of you starting. This is the live, real-time audience during the broadcast, not video views counted after it ends. And if a delivery ever misses your broadcast, support sends it again free on your next one.
Frequently Asked Questions
Only the public link to your live broadcast, the same one you share so people can watch. If you schedule the live in advance, that link exists before you start, so you can copy it and have your order ready to go. No login of any kind is ever part of it.
You set both at the point of ordering: the number of people in the room at once, and the length of their stay, adjustable between 15 and 180 minutes. Match the duration to your broadcast and point the crowd size at the moment you most want looking full, like an opening or a reveal.
As you go live, or moments before. Viewers can only enter a broadcast that is actually airing, so an order placed days early simply waits until you start. The easy routine is to schedule the live, keep the order page open, and confirm as you go on air.
The first ones appear within a couple of minutes of the broadcast running, and the full amount you picked is usually all in the room within roughly half an hour. They arrive as a wave rather than a slow queue, so the count climbs quickly once you begin.
As long as you set, anywhere from 15 up to 180 minutes, and your quantity is the number watching at the same moment, not a total spread across the whole broadcast. Point a shorter window at your key segment, or use a longer one to hold the room across a full show.
Real people on normal Facebook accounts. A viewer bot is a script that opens hollow connections to fake a count, and Facebook strips that traffic fast, sometimes mid-broadcast. Someone watching from their own account reads as any other viewer in the room, because that is what they are.
Video views are counted on a clip after it is posted, tallying up over time. This is the live, concurrent audience watching your broadcast as it happens, the watching-now number beside the LIVE badge. It shapes how the room feels in the moment, not a total you read later.
Nobody can honestly promise zero risk, but genuine viewers keep you clear of the patterns that draw attention.
Never, and be cautious of anyone who asks. Watching a live broadcast takes no access at all, so the public link is the only thing we use. Your password and your account controls stay entirely with you, exactly as they should for a public stream anyone can view.
Message support with your order number and the link to your broadcast. A live that has already ended cannot be filled afterward, so the guarantee works on delivery: if viewers fail to arrive for your stream, they are sent again free the next time you go live.
They can, and while it counts most. A live broadcast is surfaced as it airs, not after, so early momentum matters more than it would on a normal post. A rising live count gives Facebook a reason to show your broadcast to more people, and how long they stay decides the rest.
Treat chat as a bonus, not a promise: the order puts people in the room watching, not messages on the screen. What broadcasters often notice is their own audience commenting more once the count rises, because a busy room makes speaking up feel less exposed.



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