One Redditor bought a handful of upvotes just to see what would happen, and the results were quick but short-lived, and the comments helped spell out why. Let’s break down what worked, what didn’t, and what that means for you, so you can decide if a small test is worth it or if there’s a safer plan to try first.
What happened in the test
- Upvotes can be bought from many sites, and most of them take cryptocurrency only, so buyers stay private.
- After paying, the upvotes arrived in about 15 minutes, which is the main selling point.
- You can also buy downvotes, comments, and even “subscribers” for a small subreddit.
- The post mostly got the exact votes that were purchased and then stopped growing, so the quick bump did not turn into a big win.
What this means for you
People like to say, “Buy a quick boost, get to the top, and everyone will see you.” Sometimes that happens, and sometimes it doesn’t.
It works only when:
- your post truly fits the subreddit,
- your title is clear, and
- you get real comments that keep the thread alive.
If you want a deeper explanation of what upvotes can and can’t do, read:
Does buying upvotes really work?
People sell the idea that “a quick boost gets you to the top, and then everyone sees you.” Sometimes that happens, and sometimes it does not.
It only works when the post already fits the subreddit, the title is clear, and the comments feel real and useful. If the post is weak, the extra votes won’t save it, and the growth ends as soon as the paid votes stop.
Who usually buys this
- Small brands that want quick attention.
- People who want to push a message during busy news cycles.
- A few heavy spenders who don’t mind paying to move the needle.
Big companies rarely do this because of the risk and the approval chain.
Quick cost example (so expectations stay real)
Let’s say you buy 150 upvotes.
- If your post matches the topic well and you are active in comments, you might pick up some organic comments and a few more votes.
- If the fit is weak, you may get the 150 you paid for and nothing more, so your money just buys a short spike.
This is why content and comments matter more than the number you buy.
Risks you should not ignore
- Rules and bans: Many subs ban any vote boosting, and Reddit can detect patterns, so accounts and posts can be limited or removed.
- Trust loss: If the votes look high and the comments look dead, people notice and push back.
- Poor returns: If the content is not useful, the boost dies quickly and the money is gone.
If you still want to test
If you still want to test this in a small, controlled way, pick the right subreddit and read the rules, because every sub is different and mods do notice.
- Write for replies, not just votes, so share proof or steps and ask one simple question that invites answers.
- Be present for the first hour and reply fast, since real comments matter more than raw vote count.
- Stop early if it’s not landing, and don’t keep adding votes when there are no genuine comments.
A better and safer way
- Use Reddit to research real questions and wording, and then make content that answers those questions clearly.
- Share your proof (before/after, steps, screenshots), and keep links in the comments if the sub prefers that.
- You can buy Reddit upvotes from Socioblend, and set clear limits so you don’t overdo it.
- Crosspost only where it makes sense and where rules allow it.
- Be honest about who you are when needed, because trust lasts longer than a spike.
If you want to learn how to use Reddit for search without annoying people, this guide helps:
Simple pre-post checklist
Before you post, run through this quick list so your thread fits the sub and gets real replies. It takes a minute, and it can save your post from being removed or ignored.
- Does this post fit the subreddit topic and rules?
Read the sidebar and recent posts, and make sure your topic and format are allowed so mods don’t remove it. - Is the title clear and human?
Say exactly what you’re sharing or asking, and avoid clickbait so people know why they should open it. - Is there a real asset inside (steps, proof, file, screenshot)?
Give something useful people can use or check, because proof makes your post believable and worth saving. - Do I have one question that invites replies?
Ask one simple, specific question so readers know how to respond and the thread doesn’t drift. - Am I ready to reply for the next 30-60 minutes?
Stay active and answer comments quickly, since early replies keep the post visible and build trust.
In the end, paid upvotes are only a push, and the real work is your topic, title, and replies. So fix those first, and then test a small boost only if you truly fit the sub.
Short FAQ
Q: Will buying upvotes guarantee I reach the top?
A: No. It may help you enter the feed faster, but you still need fit and comments or it fades quickly.
Q: Is this allowed?
A: Many subs ban it, and Reddit can act on patterns. Know the rules and accept the risk if you test.
Q: How many should I buy if I test?
A: As few as possible. Test once, watch comments, and stop if there is no real response.