👥 Real people, never bots • 💗 Hearts float the moment you go live • 🔒 No password needed • âš¡ Works in real time, during your Live • 🎯 Built for TikTok’s live ranking signal
💗 You go live, and nothing floats up the screen
You hit go live, say hello, and wait for the room to feel like a room. Instead the screen just sits there. No hearts drifting up past your face, no little pink burst when you make a joke or answer a comment. Someone new taps into your Live, watches for four seconds, sees a still screen, and taps right back out, because a Live with no hearts floating reads as a broadcast nobody is feeling. It is a strange kind of quiet that happens in real time, in front of whoever is watching right now, and you cannot edit it out afterward.
Hearts are the pulse TikTok reads while you are still on air
A like on a normal video is a badge that sits under a clip forever. A like on a Live only exists in the moment, tapped by someone watching right now, and it floats up the screen and is gone. That makes it the clearest pulse TikTok has for a broadcast that is currently airing. A steady stream of hearts tells the app real people are engaged with this room right now, and TikTok uses that Live engagement as a ranking signal to decide whether to push your broadcast to more of the people browsing Lives, and to move you toward the thresholds and LIVE perks tied to a room that is clearly working. A silent one gets passed over while it is still happening, the one time you cannot fix it later.
Why hosts actually buy the hearts
The reasons trace back to the pressure of broadcasting live. A new host goes live to a handful of people and gets silence back, so the first hearts matter, giving the opening minutes a pulse instead of dead air. Some are mid-sale, walking through a product or a drop, and know a stream of hearts reads as buyers actually into it, which speeds up everyone else’s decision to trust the room. Others are tired of watching a rival’s Live fill up with hearts while theirs sits flat, since a viewer flipping between two Lives follows whichever one already looks alive. And plenty just want the room to feel like a room from the first second, so their own energy does not flatten out talking to what looks like nobody.
🤔 What people wonder once the Live is actually running
Two honest questions come up. Will these hearts show as real activity, or sit oddly apart from the room? They come from real people on real TikTok accounts, tapping like the same way any viewer would mid-broadcast, so they move with your Live the way genuine hearts do, never in a stiff, bot-like burst. Will it make my Live take off on its own? Hearts give TikTok’s live ranking a real signal that this room is worth showing to more people, exactly the push a quiet Live is missing, but the honest limit is that hearts amplify a Live that already has something happening in it. They will not carry a silent host through an hour with nothing to say.
Real people, never bots, and nothing that touches your account
Bot hearts are the fastest way to make a Live look wrong while it airs, arriving in a flat, mechanical rhythm that reads as exactly what it is. We only send real people, tapping like from genuine accounts in real time, so the rhythm looks like any Live earning organic love. This is likes during the broadcast itself, not the like sitting under a posted video afterward, so it starts working the second you go live rather than building up over days. All we need is your username, never your password, so your login stays completely yours.
Frequently Asked Questions
They are the hearts a viewer taps while watching your broadcast, and TikTok reads a steady stream of them as a live signal that the room is worth showing to more people currently browsing Lives. Unlike a video like, a Live like only counts in the moment you are on air, which is why it works as a real-time pulse rather than a lasting badge.
Yes, completely separate systems. A regular like sits under a posted video and stays there. A Live like exists only while you are broadcasting, floats up the screen, and is gone once the Live ends, and it is tracked apart from your video like count entirely.
Yes. TikTok watches engagement on a Live while it is running, and hearts are one of the clearest signals it reads, so a room earning a steady stream of likes has a real shot at reaching more of the people currently scrolling through Lives at that moment.
Real people on genuine TikTok accounts, tapping the heart the same way any viewer watching your broadcast would. We never use bot traffic, since a flat, mechanical burst of hearts is the exact pattern that reads as fake mid-broadcast.
Not directly. TikTok’s Live payouts run through Diamonds, the currency built from virtual gifts viewers send, not from likes. Hearts do real work by keeping the room feeling alive and pushing your Live toward more viewers, and more viewers is what usually leads to more gifts.
No, never. We only need your username to find your Live. Real people join and tap like exactly as any viewer would, so your login and account settings are never part of the order.
The moment you start your broadcast. This only works on a Live that is currently airing, so you place the order as you go on, or in the seconds right before, and the hearts begin floating shortly after.
Yes. Every heart comes from a real account instead of a bot, so there is no unnatural pattern for TikTok to flag, and we never touch your login, which keeps the order well clear of your account controls. Your password never leaves your hands.
Live engagement, including likes, feeds into how TikTok ranks and surfaces your broadcast while it airs, which is separate from the Diamond totals that drive the gifting leaderboard. A Live pulling steady likes is the one that tends to climb both.
No, and we will not claim otherwise. Likes give TikTok’s live ranking a genuine reason to push your broadcast to more people, which is real momentum a quiet room is missing, but they cannot carry an hour with nothing happening in it. Bring the content; the hearts help TikTok notice it while you are on air.

