👥 Real people, never bots • ⚡ Starts instantly • 🔒 No password needed • ♾️ Lifetime refill • 📈 Boosts your equity score
🎧 You upload the song, then check back, and the number has not moved
You finish the mix, pick the best cut, and put it up on ReverbNation. Then you wait. You check the page an hour later, then the next day, and the play count sits at nine, or twelve, or wherever it started. No proof anyone actually pressed play the whole way through. You know the song is good. The number does not say so. And on a platform built to surface bands to industry people, a track stuck in single digits reads as a song nobody has found yet, not a song worth finding.
Plays are the number ReverbNation itself uses to judge you
A play on ReverbNation is not just a stat for you to admire. It feeds the site’s own band-equity score, the ranking that decides where you land on genre and local charts. Labels, promoters, and press browse those charts looking for something already moving, not something sitting untouched at zero. So the play count is doing two jobs at once: it tells a listener this song has an audience, and it tells ReverbNation’s own ranking system to put you in front of more people. A song stuck on a low count rarely gets either.
Why musicians actually buy plays
Nobody buys plays to stare at a bigger number for fun. Artists do it because a track with real traction gets noticed by the people who matter, the labels and promoters scanning charts for the next act worth a look. Others are tired of watching newer acts with weaker songs but higher counts climb past them on the local chart, purely because the number does the talking before the music does. Some have a gig, a submission, or a press push coming up and want the page to already look like it belongs there. Every reason traces back to the same thing: an unheard song with no plays never gets the chance to be judged on its merits.
🛡️ The worry after you hit order, answered straight
Two questions follow right after checkout. First, will ReverbNation notice and shut the account down. Second, will this actually do anything, or just sit there as a hollow number. Here is the honest answer: plays raise your equity score and your chart position, which puts real listeners in front of the song who would never have found it otherwise. What plays cannot do is turn a weak song into a hit. They open the door. The song still has to hold someone’s attention once they walk through it.
Real people, never bots, and nothing that puts your page at risk
Almost every ReverbNation horror story traces back to bot plays, hollow traffic that never listened, never converts to a fan, and can leave an obvious trail. We do not use them. Every play comes from a real person on a real account, the same kind of listener who might stumble onto your song naturally. We never ask for your ReverbNation password, only your track link, so your account login is never touched. Delivery starts instantly after you order, and a lifetime refill guarantee holds your count in place for as long as the song stays on your page, so the number you paid for is the number that stays.
Frequently Asked Questions
Every play adds to your band equity score, which decides where your song lands on ReverbNation’s genre and local charts. A stronger score moves your track further up those charts, and charts are one of the places industry visitors browse when scouting new artists.
Not automatically. ReverbNation weighs several signals into equity, including fan activity and how recently you have been active, so plays are one input among a few rather than the entire formula. What plays reliably do is grow the total that feeds into that score over time.
Yes. Each one comes from a genuine ReverbNation listener with an active account, never a script or a bot. That is deliberate: a real person landing on your track behaves the same as any other listener your song picks up on its own.
Yes. Because the listeners are real people rather than automated traffic, there is no artificial pattern for ReverbNation to notice. Site rules around bought promotion sit under their terms of service, not under anything criminal, and using real accounts is what keeps an order low-risk.
No. We only need the link to your track or profile page. Real listeners find it and press play the normal way, so your login and account settings are never part of the order.
A play counts one listen to one song. A fan is someone who follows your whole profile so they see everything you release later. Plays move a single track’s standing; fans build your reach as an artist, and the two totals climb on their own separate tracks.
No, and it is worth saying plainly. What this order buys is exposure, real listeners landing on a track that would otherwise sit unheard. Whether they stick around, share it, or come back for the next release depends entirely on the song itself once they press play.
Delivery starts instantly once you order, with the first plays landing on your track within minutes. Bigger orders naturally take longer to finish than smaller ones, and the expected completion window is shown for each quantity before you check out.
Yes. Once you buy a quantity, a lifetime refill guarantee keeps that number attached to your track for as long as it stays posted. Nothing about it expires or needs renewing, and if the count ever moves for any reason, we top it back up at no charge.
Organic plays build up as fans discover your song through search, playlists, and shares, which works but can take months on a brand-new upload with no existing audience. Buying plays gives the count an immediate lift while that organic discovery keeps building in the background.

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