Twitter likes feed the engagement-rate input the For You ranker uses to decide which tweets surface on the timelines of users outside the original author's follower graph. Likes carry less weight than replies and retweets — the For You ranker reads replies first, retweets second, likes third, follows fourth — but they remain the volume baseline that the higher-weight signals are measured against. A tweet with strong reply velocity but zero likes still gets demoted, because the like-to-impression ratio reads as a low-quality interaction floor.
What an order from us actually looks like: 100 to 1,000 likes per package, drip-fed across the first hours of the tweet being live rather than landing in a single batch. Source accounts have profile photos, real tweet history, and a follower-to-following ratio inside the 1:10 imbalance threshold X's quality system tolerates rather than the empty-shell pattern it flags. We do not recycle handles across orders, we do not pair the like delivery with auto-replies that look like the templated text X's spam filter strips, and we do not pull from the disposable handles X has been suspending since the 2024 inauthentic-engagement sweeps.
We need only the public tweet URL. No password, no two-factor code, no OAuth grant. The Buy Now button on each package card uses TRY-locked pricing for Türkiye buyers and locks the FX rate at checkout for everyone else, so the amount you pay does not move while the likes are still being delivered.
Refill window is 30 days. If part of the delivered like-count drops during that window because X removes the source accounts in a cleanup wave, we top the gap back up automatically, no support ticket required. The refill applies on every quantity tier.
A few constraints worth knowing before you order. The For You ranker weights replies above retweets, retweets above likes, and likes above follows, so likes feed the engagement floor but do not move surfacing on their own; the tweet still has to attract replies and retweets to graduate out of the original follower graph. Verified accounts receive a four-times algorithmic multiplier since 2023, so the per-like lift is higher on a paid-blue tweet than on a free-account tweet on identical content. The 280-character limit plus any media attachment combines into a "completeness" signal the ranker reads alongside engagement velocity, so a longer well-formed tweet with a media item compounds like volume harder than a short text-only one.
For a deeper look at how reply velocity interacts with like volume on the same tweet, see our guide on Twitter algorithm changes for 2026.

