🧡 Real people, never bots • ⚡ Starts instantly • 🔒 No password needed • ♾️ Lifetime refill • 📈 Feeds Discorank & Explore
🧡 The play count climbs, but almost nobody hits the heart
You upload the track and share the link everywhere you can, and the play count ticks up. That part feels good. Then you glance under the waveform at the like count, and it barely moved. A few hundred plays, four hearts. That gap is the quiet letdown of putting a song out: people pressed play, plenty of them, but almost nobody stayed long enough, or cared enough, to tap the heart on the way out. A play only means the track loaded. It does not say if anyone rated what they heard. When the like count sits that low next to the plays, it reads as one thing to anyone scrolling past: a track people sampled and moved on from.
A like is a listener rating the track, a play is just traffic
On SoundCloud, the heart is the one action a listener takes purely because the track earned it. Nobody is forced to like anything, so every heart under your waveform is a small, voluntary vote that the song was worth the time. That is a different signal than a play, which fires the moment audio starts and says nothing about whether the listener stuck around or skipped away thirty seconds in. SoundCloud’s own system knows the difference. Likes feed into Discorank, the ranking logic behind Explore, search, and the related tracks shown next to other songs, so a track with a healthy like count next to its plays reads as one worth surfacing again.
Why artists actually go build this number
The reasons trace back to wanting proof, not just traffic. An artist puts out a new track knowing plays alone do not show it landed, so real hearts early on give the song a signal that people are rating it, not just sampling it. Others are putting a set together for a label, a curator, or a playlist owner, and a thin like count next to healthy plays is exactly the gap that makes a pitch look weak before anyone presses play. Some are tired of watching a rival’s track sit at the top of a genre tag with hearts to match its plays, while their own song shows the opposite split. The goal is always the same: make the number under the waveform match how good the track is.
🛡️ What people ask right after ordering, answered straight
Once someone is ready to buy likes, the same two questions come up. The first is whether a bought like behaves like a real one. It does, because it is one: an actual listener on a real SoundCloud account tapping the heart on your track. The second is what likes will and will not do. They widen the gap between how many people heard the track and how many appear to have valued it, exactly the signal a track with strong plays but thin hearts is missing. What likes cannot do is turn a track nobody would otherwise finish into a hit, and there is no confirmed count that guarantees a chart spot or curator attention. Likes strengthen a track’s standing; they do not buy it outright.
Real listeners, never bots, and nothing that puts your account at risk
Every like we deliver comes from a genuine SoundCloud account choosing to heart your track, never a bot or a throwaway profile built to pad a number. All we need is your track link, never your password, so your login stays completely yours. Delivery starts within moments of ordering, and a lifetime refill guarantee backs every like, so the count you paid for is protected for as long as the track stays up.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. You get real SoundCloud users hearting your specific track, the same tap any organic listener would make. You give us the track link, we never touch your login, and the hearts start landing on the song shortly after checkout.
Yes. Likes feed into Discorank, the system behind SoundCloud’s Explore page, search rankings, and the related tracks shown alongside other songs. A stronger like count is one of the signals Discorank weighs when deciding which tracks to keep pushing into those spots.
A play just means the audio started, which can happen from a few seconds of listening before someone skips away. A like is a deliberate tap that only happens because the listener rated the track worth it, which is why SoundCloud’s system treats a heart as a far stronger signal than a single play.
Real accounts, every time. Each like comes from an actual person on a genuine SoundCloud profile choosing to hit the heart, not an automated script. That is what makes it register as a real rating signal to SoundCloud’s own system in the first place.
No, never. The only thing we need is the link to your track. Real listeners heart it directly, the same way a fan discovering the song would, so your login and account controls are never part of the order.
Yes. Because every like comes from a real account behaving exactly like an organic listener, there is nothing synthetic attached to the track for anyone to question.
No single number opens up a chart or a curator’s playlist, and there is no published threshold either promises. What a strong like count does is make the track look proven rather than untested, which helps when a curator, label, or playlist owner is deciding what to check out next.
Not directly. A like itself does not pay out anything. What it does is make the track more likely to get replayed and resurfaced through Discorank, and those repeat plays are what count toward royalties under SoundCloud’s Fan-Powered Royalties system. Likes work upstream of the plays that actually generate revenue.
Anyone visiting your track can see the total like count under the waveform, and liked tracks also show up on the liker’s own profile under their Likes tab unless they have made that section private. So the count is public, but SoundCloud does not send you a notification listing every person who hearted the song.
Enough that the heart count no longer looks like an afterthought next to your plays. A track you are testing suits a smaller order, while a single earmarked for label or curator submissions usually calls for a higher tier so the like-to-play ratio holds up under a closer look.


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