👥 Real people, never bots • ⚡ Starts instantly • 🔒 No password needed • ♾️ Lifetime refill • 📈 Built to clear the front page
🚀 You post, refresh, and watch it sink
You spent real time on it. Found the right subreddit, wrote a title that isn’t clickbait, maybe added a genuinely useful comment further down. You hit post, then you do the thing everyone does: refresh. One upvote. Refresh again. Still one. Meanwhile the queue keeps moving, newer posts stack on top, and yours slides toward the bottom of new where almost nobody scrolls. It’s not that the post was bad. Reddit just gave it a few minutes to prove itself, nobody caught it in that window, and now it’s buried under everything that came after. A good idea died at 1 upvote, and you’ll never know how many people would have liked it.
Why the first upvotes matter more than any that come after
Reddit doesn’t show every post to everyone. It ranks new posts by upvotes relative to how long they’ve been up, so a post with a handful of upvotes in its first stretch reads as worth surfacing and gets pushed toward hot, toward the subreddit’s front page, sometimes toward Reddit’s actual front page. A post that sits flat reads as uninteresting and quietly drops out of new before most members open the subreddit that day. So the early upvotes aren’t just a nice number. They decide whether your post gets a real audience at all, or dies unseen no matter how good it was.
Why people actually buy the early push
Most people buying upvotes aren’t trying to fake a viral moment. They’re trying to clear that first narrow window before it closes. A launch post, a portfolio piece, an AMA, a product thread, something with a real deadline where waiting for it to eventually catch on organically isn’t good enough. Getting a post into positive territory early gives real members an actual reason to open it, and from there genuine upvotes can take over if the content holds up. Some treat visibility this way on purpose, the same way a business buys an ad slot instead of hoping for word of mouth. Others just want the karma and credibility of a post that clearly landed, instead of one more thread that quietly vanished at zero.
🛡️ The worry after you hit buy, answered straight
The honest question people have isn’t whether this works, it’s whether Reddit can tell. Here’s the straight answer: what actually gets a post’s votes stripped is a sudden, obvious spike from accounts with no history, all voting in the same narrow burst. We avoid exactly that pattern. Your upvotes come from real accounts, added at a measured pace, not a bot flood. Buying upvotes sits in Reddit’s terms of service, not anywhere near a legal problem, and it isn’t something that follows you around publicly. One honest limit worth saying plainly: upvotes get people to open your post. They don’t rewrite it. A weak post with a fast early push still reads as weak once people click in. What this genuinely does is buy your content the audience it needs for a fair read.
Real accounts, and why we do it this way
Every upvote you get here comes from a real Reddit account, never a bot farm, because bot patterns are exactly what gets caught and stripped back out, which defeats the entire point of buying them. We never ask for your password, only the link to your post or comment, so your login stays completely yours. Delivery starts within moments of ordering, and the full amount you buy is backed by a lifetime refill: if any of it is ever lost to Reddit’s own vote fuzzing, we replace it free, for as long as that post is live. You’re giving a post you already believe in the shot it was always supposed to get.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. A post’s ranking is tied to its vote count in that first stretch after posting, so extra upvotes early on push it toward hot and the subreddit front page instead of letting it sink in new. That visibility is what puts your content in front of real members who can then vote and comment on their own.
Yes, every one comes from a genuine, active Reddit account, not a bot or a throwaway shell with zero history. That is also the safer choice for your post: real accounts behave like real votes, while obvious bot patterns are what actually draws attention.
Yes, when the votes come in like real ones do. We add real accounts at a measured pace instead of a sudden spike, which is the pattern Reddit’s systems are actually built to look for.
No, never. We only need the link to the post or comment you want upvoted. Your login and account settings are never touched, requested, or needed at any point in the order.
They start landing within moments of your order going through. Smaller orders finish inside a day, while larger vote counts are spread out over several days so the pace looks natural rather than instant and staged.
An upvote is a single vote on one post or comment. Karma is your running account total built from every upvote you’ve ever earned across everything you’ve posted. Upvoting one post well contributes directly to that lifetime karma number on your profile.
No. Reddit shows the total vote count on a post, but it does not publicly reveal which accounts upvoted or downvoted it, for anyone’s posts. Your total simply reflects real accounts adding real votes, with no visible list attached.
Yes, the amount you order is yours to keep. Reddit’s own vote fuzzing naturally shifts small numbers on any post over time, ours included, so if your count ever dips below what you paid for, we top it back up free for as long as the post is live. That is covered by our lifetime refill.
Both. A comment buried on page two of a thread gets the same early-visibility problem as a new post, and an upvote push works the same way for either: it helps a comment rise toward the top where people actually read replies.
Upvotes get your post past the first hurdle and in front of real people who would otherwise never scroll far enough to see it. From there, whether it keeps climbing depends on whether the content itself holds someone’s attention once they click. Think of it as buying the fair look, not a guaranteed outcome.


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