👥 Real people, never bots • ❤️ Real hearts, real Collections • 🔒 No password needed • ♾️ Lifetime refill • ⚡ Starts instantly
❤️ The play count goes up, and you still cannot tell if it landed
You watch the numbers climb and it should feel good. For a minute it does. Then the same question creeps back in: did anyone actually care, or did the track just play in the background while someone made coffee? A play tells you the song ran for a few seconds or the full length. It does not tell you whether the person on the other end felt anything. That is the quiet gap behind a rising play count on a hi-fi platform full of people who chose Tidal specifically because they care about the music. Plays alone cannot prove the track meant something to anyone.
A like is a listener choosing to keep the track, not just hear it
On Tidal, tapping the heart under a song does one specific thing: it saves that track into the listener’s own Collection, the personal library built to hold music they want back. Nobody stumbles into liking a song by accident the way they might let a track autoplay. It takes a deliberate tap, made after the song was already heard. That is what separates a like from a play. A play measures a moment. A like measures a decision, one listener deciding your track belongs in their collection alongside everything else they chose to keep. A healthy like count under a song is the plainest proof that the track is doing more than just running.
Why artists actually go build this number
The reasons trace back to wanting proof, not just noise. An artist drops a new track and knows plays alone will not settle whether it landed, so they want real hearts on it early, something concrete that says people are keeping this, not only letting it play once. Others compare their like count to tracks doing well in the same genre and notice the gap, because a listener scanning two songs before choosing one leans toward the track that already looks kept rather than untouched. Some care about the platform’s audiophile crowd specifically. Tidal draws listeners who pay attention on purpose, so a like from that audience carries weight a random play does not. The goal is always the same: turn a passing stream into evidence the song was worth keeping.
🛡️ The question every artist has right after ordering, answered straight
Once someone decides to buy likes, one doubt tends to surface first: does a bought like actually behave like a real one. It does, because it is one, a genuine Tidal listener tapping the heart on your track and saving it to their Collection the same way any real fan would. What buying likes will not do is turn a track nobody would otherwise want twice into a hit. Likes prove a song is worth keeping to the people who already hear it; they cannot make a weak track feel essential to someone playing it for the first time. Buy them for a track you stand behind, and the number tells the truth you already believe.
Real listeners, never bots, and nothing that puts your account at risk
Every like we deliver comes from a real Tidal account tapping the heart and saving your track to their own Collection, never a bot or a throwaway profile built only to pad a count. We only need your track link, never your password, so your login and account settings stay untouched. Delivery starts within moments of ordering, and a lifetime refill guarantee backs every like behind it, so the count you paid for stays protected for as long as the track is yours.
Frequently Asked Questions
It means a listener tapped the heart icon under your track and saved it into their own Collection, the personal library every Tidal user keeps for music they want to hear again. It is a deliberate action taken after the song was already heard, not something that happens by accident.
A play just means the track ran, which can happen passively while someone works or half-listens. A like is a listener choosing, after hearing it, to save the song into their Collection for later. That makes a like a far stronger signal that the track actually connected with someone.
The like count sits under the track alongside the play count, visible to anyone who views the song page. A healthy number there gives a new visitor a quick read on whether other listeners found the track worth keeping before they have even pressed play themselves.
No, never. All we need is the link to your track. Real listeners visit it and tap the heart directly, the same way any fan discovering the song would, so your login and account controls are never part of the order.
Real listeners, every time. Each like comes from an actual Tidal account actively tapping the heart on your track, not an automated script or a fake profile. That is exactly what makes it register as a genuine save into someone’s Collection rather than an empty number.
Yes. Every like comes from a genuine account behaving exactly like an organic listener, so there is nothing synthetic attached to the track for anyone to question.
A like is tied to one song, saved into the listener’s Collection because that specific track earned it. Following an artist is a broader move, a listener choosing to keep up with everything you release. A track can rack up likes long before someone commits to following the artist behind it.
The first likes land within moments of ordering, and the rest follow at a steady daily pace after that. Smaller orders finish quickly, while larger counts take longer to complete because real listeners are saving your track at a natural, human rate rather than all at once.
The likes you order are counted as yours for good. Real listeners occasionally clean out their Collection over time the same way anyone reorganizes a library, and if your count ever dips because of that, we quietly add the difference back at no extra cost. It is a one-time purchase we protect for life, not a subscription you renew.
Enough that the track reads as a song people are actually saving, not just streaming past. A smaller order suits a track you are testing, while a release you are pushing hard often calls for a higher count so the first listeners to land on it see proof it is already worth keeping.

Reviews
There are no reviews yet.