Kick growth services
Followers, live viewers, chat activity — products built around how Kick's Browse-page sort and front-page curation actually rank streams. Real account pool. Concurrent-viewer pacing that survives Kick's anti-spam pipeline. 30-day refill on every order.
Pick by outcome. Kick reads three independent signals to decide whether a stream earns a spot in the Browse sort — credibility, viewers, and chat. Different products move each.
Kick's anti-passive-viewer filter
Real Kick followers from active accounts. Builds the channel-credibility signal Kick's recommendation engine reads when deciding whether to surface your channel in Following and Categories. Delivered gradually, no password required.
Learn moreConcurrent live viewers for your Kick stream, paced across the full 60-minute session. Lifts your channel above the Browse-page inflection point so cold discovery actually flows. Real account pool, anti-spam-resistant.
Learn moreCustom chat messages from real Kick accounts during your 60-minute live session. Type your messages, we deliver them naturally across the stream, boosts visible chat engagement and helps the chat-velocity signal Kick reads when ranking livestreams.
Learn moreKick's anti-spam pipeline is more aggressive than most growth providers expect. The platform launched in 2022 with a deliberate "not Twitch" positioning, and a big part of that pitch is keeping Browse-page rankings clean — which means an anti-bot system that strips obviously-fake concurrent viewers from a stream within the first 3-5 minutes. Most generic "Kick viewers" services trip that filter because they spin viewers up in a single batch and never rotate them. The viewer services here pace concurrent viewers across the actual stream window and rotate IPs through residential pools, so the count holds for the full duration.
Followers on Kick compound differently than on Twitch. Kick's Browse page weighs concurrent viewers first and follower count second; the Channels page leans heavily on follower count as the credibility filter that decides whether a viewer even clicks through. This means follower count on Kick functions as the first-impression signal — a viewer browsing categories sees follower count next to your stream thumbnail, and channels under 1,000 followers get significantly fewer click-throughs than channels above. Our follower SKUs are sized to clear that 1,000-follower threshold quickly so you stop bleeding clicks.
Chat activity is the third signal Kick reads, and it's the most under-built service in the market. Kick's anti-passive-viewer logic flags streams where the viewer-to-chatter ratio is too high — a stream sitting at 200 concurrent viewers with zero chat activity reads as botted (and gets demoted in the Browse sort) even if those viewers are real. Our Chat Bots [CUSTOM] service ships keyword-targeted messages from real Kick accounts paced across the stream window so the viewer-to-chat ratio stays in the natural 4-8% range. 30-day refill on follower drops, make-good policy on viewer/chat orders that don't deliver across the full stream window.
Kick deliberately doesn't run an algorithmic recommendation feed. There's no "For You" page, no Twitch-style "channels you might like" carousel driven by viewing history. Discovery happens through three surfaces: the front page (curated mix of featured + Kick partner streams), the Browse page (category-by-category sort), and outbound mentions from Kick's social accounts. Of those three, only Browse is tunable through growth investment — the front page is editorial and outbound mentions are awarded for content quality, not stream metrics.
The Browse sort is straightforward and brutal. Within a category (e.g., "Slots & Casino" or "Just Chatting"), Kick sorts live channels by concurrent viewer count, full stop. There's a small lift for streamers with the Kick Partner badge and a slight depression for streams under ~5 viewers (so empty channels don't crowd the top), but otherwise it's a flat numerical sort. This makes Kick viewer services exceptionally high-leverage for small streams: the median viewer count in most non-flagship categories is 30-80, so 250-500 paced viewers will land you in the top-10 of the category page during your stream window.
Follower count drives the click-through rate, not the rank. When a viewer browses a category, they see your stream tile with concurrent-viewer count + your follower total. Stream tiles with fewer than ~500 followers get noticeably fewer clicks even when they're sitting in the top-10 of the category. This is why follower investment is best paired with viewer investment — viewers get you into the top-10 of Browse, followers convert that placement into real click-through. A stream with 50 viewers and 50 followers and a stream with 50 viewers and 5,000 followers see meaningfully different click-through rates from the same Browse-page position.
Chat activity is Kick's anti-spam tell. The platform's behind-the-scenes signal pipeline reads viewer count, follower count, and chat-message frequency together. A stream where the viewer-to-chatter ratio is wildly outside the natural 4-8% range (e.g., 1,000 viewers with 2 messages per minute) gets flagged for review — Kick's anti-spam team manually audits flagged streams and can soft-demote the channel from the Browse sort for the rest of the stream. Real chat activity at the natural ratio keeps the channel below the flag threshold and reads as authentic engagement to the algorithm. This is why chat-bot pacing matters more than chat-bot quantity — 60 messages over a 60-minute stream from real accounts beats 600 messages in the first 5 minutes from obvious bots.
Most growing Kick channels start with followers — that's the click-through investment that pays out for months. If you have a stream scheduled and want to break into the Browse sort, lead with live viewers timed to the stream start, and pair with chat activity to keep the viewer-to-chat ratio natural.