Stable, gradual viewers that help your stream rise in the category listings.
- 50 viewersSoon
- 100 viewersSoon
- 250 viewersSoon
Kick is still young, and that cuts both ways. There is room to get noticed, but the category pages move fast and a stream with a handful of viewers slides straight to the bottom. People scroll past it without clicking.
You go live, you are good on camera, and almost nobody sees it. That is the gap these tools close. They put a real number on your stream so it sits where browsers actually look, then your content does the rest.
Kick growth is coming soon. Services and prices will go live here the moment they open for orders.
Stable, gradual viewers that help your stream rise in the category listings.
A healthy rhythm of conversation that makes your channel feel active and welcoming.
High-quality, profile-complete followers that stick and build social proof.
30% under the industry average. Every service is a one-time purchase. Kick services open for orders here as soon as they go live.
Kick sorts its categories by live viewer count. A few more viewers can be the difference between page one and nobody finding you.
Use the ready-made chat lines or load your own, so a first-time visitor reads messages instead of dead air.
Followers with real profiles, not blank eggs. Enough that a new viewer does not write your channel off at a glance.
Pick the amount and the timing yourself. Line it up with a launch or a late session, and change it mid-stream if you want.
Open any Kick category and the order is simple: the streams with the most viewers sit at the top, and everyone else is below the fold. Viewers do not scroll. They click whatever is in front of them.
The viewer tool adds to your live count so you are actually in that top stretch where people are looking. The numbers come in over the session, not all at once, so the count tracks your stream instead of jumping in a way nobody believes.
Nothing empties a Kick stream faster than a chat box that has not moved in a while. A new viewer lands, sees no one talking, and assumes they walked in on a dead channel. They are gone before you notice them.
Chatters keep messages moving so the room reads as awake. It also breaks the cold-start problem: people are far more likely to say something when the chat is already going than when they would be the only voice in it.
When someone clicks your Kick profile, the follower number is right there, and they judge it at a glance. A handful of followers tells them the content has not earned an audience yet, so they do not bother watching to find out if that is true.
Followers fix the first impression. The number arrives in steps rather than a single dump, so the profile reads as a channel people are finding, not one that paid for a pile of names overnight.
No vague promises. Here is how the Kick tools work and what we hand you when you use them.
Viewers and followers land in steps, not one giant jump. A count that fits the room is a count people believe.
You pick how many and when. Run it for a launch night, a tournament, or the hours your regulars are around.
If something is off or you are not sure how to set it up, you reach a person who answers, not a ticket queue.
You point the tool at your channel. We do not ask for your password and we never post or message as you.
We keep the numbers paced and we never ask for your login, so the tool runs on your channel without acting as you. Like anything in this space it sits in a grey area, and we would rather tell you that than pretend otherwise.
Viewers move you up the category page so people find the stream. Chatters keep the room from looking dead once they arrive. Followers fix the count on your profile so a new viewer takes the channel seriously. Most people use a mix, but you can run any one on its own.
It begins after you activate it, then builds up over the stream rather than landing all at once. You should see the count move during the same session. We are not going to put a stopwatch promise on it.
The whole point of pacing it is that the count moves the way a real stream's count moves, instead of spiking in a way that gives it away. Keep the amount sensible for your channel size and it reads as ordinary growth.
Yes. You choose how many viewers, chatters or followers and when they run. Schedule it around a launch, a big game, or the time of day your regulars usually show up.
No, and anyone who tells you otherwise is selling you a lie. This gets eyes on the stream. Whether those people stay, follow and come back is on what you put out. Think of it as the push that gets you seen, not a replacement for the work.
Kick viewers, chatters and followers are on the way. Grow on YouTube and TikTok today, or check back soon for Kick.