🗳️ You pick the winning option • 👥 Real people, never bots • 🔒 No password needed • ⚡ Starts fast • ✅ Votes that stay counted
🗳️ The poll is public, and your option is losing
You opened the poll expecting a fair fight. Instead your option sits third, well behind one you know should not be ahead. Every friend who checks the link sees your name near the bottom and quietly assumes that is where you belong. Or it is your own poll: you posted it in a group or on your page, waited a day, and it is stuck at four votes. Nobody wants to be the fifth person to touch a poll that looks abandoned, so it just sits there, ignored. Either way you are watching a number decide the story for you, and right now the number is telling the wrong story.
Votes are the whole scoreboard, and they are the part you can move
A poll is decided by one thing only, the tally next to each option. People do not read the options and weigh them carefully. They glance at which choice is winning and let that shape what they think, and often how they vote themselves. A poll with real numbers on it also reads as a live, worth-joining thing, while one sitting at a handful of votes reads as dead. So the vote count does two jobs at once. It decides who wins, and it decides whether anyone bothers to take the poll seriously in the first place. That count is exactly what this puts in your hands.
Here is how you choose where the votes go
This is the part that matters, so it is worth being plain about. You share the link to the poll, and you tell us which option you want backed. That is it. The votes go to the one specific choice you name, not spread around, not to the post itself. It is not a like on the post and not a reaction to it, it is a vote cast for your option inside that one poll. Whether you are competing in someone else’s contest poll, settling a decision poll, or lifting your own, you point at the option and real people vote for it. You stay in full control of which choice climbs.
🛡️ The questions people ask before they buy, answered straight
Two things come up every time. First, are these real. They are, genuine people on real accounts opening the poll and voting, not bot profiles that look obviously fake in the results. That is what keeps the whole poll believable instead of suspicious. Second, does it actually change the standing. It does, because a poll is pure numbers and this adds real ones to the option you picked, so it climbs. The honest limit: votes push your option up and make the poll look alive and legitimate, but they cannot force a real person on the fence to agree with your side. What you get is the lead and the credibility of solid numbers; the option still has to be one people can get behind.
Real accounts casting the votes, and nothing that risks the poll
Almost every bad story about bought votes traces back to bots, blank profiles that vote in a clumsy burst and make the whole poll look rigged. We leave those out completely. Real people open your poll and vote for the option you named, arriving at a natural pace rather than all at once, so the result reads as genuine support. All we need is the poll link and the option you want, never your login, so nothing about your own account is touched. And the votes you buy are cast and counted to stay, so the standing you paid for holds.
Frequently Asked Questions
You send us the link to the poll and tell us the exact option you want voted for. The votes all go to that single choice, nothing else. You pick it, so the option that climbs is entirely your call, whether it is your own poll or one you are competing in.
Yes. Real people on genuine Facebook accounts open your poll and cast a vote for your option. They are not bot or blank profiles, which is what keeps the results looking like honest support rather than something obviously stacked.
Yes, and it is an important difference. A like or reaction sits on the post itself. A poll vote is registered inside the poll, against one specific option, and it is the number that decides which choice wins. This order casts votes, not likes or reactions.
It is built for exactly that. If you are one option in a contest poll or a decision poll, naming your option and adding real votes to it lifts you up the standing. The votes go only to your choice, so you gain ground against the other options directly.
No, never. All that is required is the public link to the poll and the option you want backed. Real people go to the poll and vote the way any group member would, so no sign-in happens and your account settings are never touched.
They begin arriving shortly after you order and land at a steady, natural pace rather than in one sudden spike. For the pack sizes here the votes are typically all in within a few hours, with the timeframe shown on each option before you order.
Because the votes come from real accounts and arrive gradually instead of all at once, they read as ordinary poll activity. That gradual, genuine pattern is the whole point, since a believable poll is the one people keep taking seriously and keep voting on.
Yes. A poll that is live and already has some votes is a good moment to add more, since the extra votes lift your option while the poll is being watched. You share the current link and name your option, and the votes go to it from there.
Yes. The votes come from real people opening your poll and choosing your option like any voter would, so the result reads as genuine rather than rigged, and there is nothing for Facebook to question. All we ever handle is the poll link and the option you name, never your login, so your own account stays completely out of it.
Any standard Facebook poll where members pick between options, whether you posted it in a group, on your page, or inside a post, or you are one of the options in someone else’s poll. As long as there is an option to vote for, we can send real votes to it.



Avery –
price is very reasonble
casey mongillo –
thanku you buy social buzz