Twitch growth services
Followers, live viewers — products built around how Twitch's front-page sort and category browse actually rank channels. Real account pool. Concurrent-viewer pacing that survives Twitch's anti-bot sweeps. 30-day refill on every order.
Pick by outcome. Twitch's discovery surfaces are tuned for two completely different audiences — channel browsers and live-stream watchers. Different products move each.
Get real Twitch followers that boost your channel's discoverability. Instant delivery, no bots, no risk. 30-day refill guarantee on every order.
Learn moreGet real Twitch channel views from genuine accounts. Fast delivery, no bots, no drops. 30-day refill guarantee on every order.
Learn moreConcurrent live viewers paced across a 60-minute Twitch stream. Real account pool, anti-spam-resistant ramp pattern, sized for short streams, quick promotional broadcasts, and brief live sessions.
Learn moreConcurrent live viewers paced across a 120-minute Twitch stream. Real account pool, anti-spam-resistant ramp pattern, sized for standard gaming sessions, podcasts, interviews, and mid-length broadcasts.
Learn moreConcurrent live viewers paced across a 240-minute Twitch stream. Real account pool, anti-spam-resistant ramp pattern, sized for long streams, tournaments, marathons, and high-visibility livestream campaigns.
Learn moreTwitch growth services typically fall into two failure modes: bot-army viewer inflation that gets stripped within an hour by Twitch's anti-spam team, and "real" follower services that ship from accounts so old and inactive they don't pass the three-day-old account filter Twitch added in 2023. The services here are built specifically to clear both gates — viewers come from accounts with stable login histories on real Twitch sessions, and followers come from accounts with prior engagement (chat, follow, channel-points spend) on the platform.
Twitch follower count compounds into the front-page sort and the category-browse rank. The Browse view (twitch.tv/directory/category/{game}) ranks live channels by concurrent viewer count first and channel followers second; the Channels page weighs followers heavily as the credibility signal that pushes a channel into the "channels you might like" recommendation strip. This means follower count is a slow-build investment that pays out in passive discovery for months — not a vanity metric. We've structured the follower SKUs to mirror that long-tail value.
Live viewer services pace concurrent viewers across the actual stream window. Spinning up 1,000 viewers in 60 seconds reads as a bot run to Twitch's anti-spam signal-pipeline; ramping to 1,000 over the first 20 minutes of a stream and holding that count for the duration reads as a real audience. Our viewer pacing follows the second pattern. Every order backed by a 30-day refill guarantee on follower drops + a make-good policy on live-viewer orders that don't deliver across the full stream window.
Twitch doesn't run a "feed algorithm" the way Instagram or TikTok do — there's no ranked timeline you scroll. Discovery happens through three distinct surfaces: Browse (sorted by concurrent viewer count within a category), the Channels page ("recommended channels" carousel), and host-raid traffic (one streamer redirecting their audience to another at end-of-stream). Each surface is tuned by completely different signals.
The Browse sort is the most predictable to optimize. Twitch sorts category pages strictly by concurrent viewer count, with a small lift for partner-status streamers and a slight depression for very small streams (under ~5 viewers) so the front of the category isn't crowded with empty channels. This means a stream sitting at 80 concurrent viewers in a competitive category like "Just Chatting" will not surface; the same stream at 200 concurrents will. The threshold isn't published but the inflection point sits at roughly the median-viewer mark for the category. Our live-viewer service is sized to lift small-but-active streams above that inflection.
Channel-page recommendations feed off follower count and prior-watch overlap. When a viewer leaves a stream, Twitch surfaces "channels you might also like" based on channels followed by the same audience. Larger follower counts widen the overlap pool and increase the rate of inbound recommendations. This is why follower count pays out over months of passive discovery rather than as an instant boost — it compounds with every viewer who finds your channel and follows.
Host-raid traffic is the most volatile signal. End-of-stream raids dump hundreds or thousands of concurrent viewers from a host channel into a target channel in the span of seconds. Twitch's anti-spam pipeline is tuned to ignore these velocity spikes (because they're a legitimate platform feature), which means raid arrivals don't trip the same flags a paid viewer service would. The downside is raids are unpredictable and unsponsorable. The upside: your concurrent-viewer count during a raid is real engagement that the algorithm reads as authentic, and viewers who stick after the raid are high-quality follows.
Most growing streamers start with followers — that's the long-tail credibility investment. If you have a stream scheduled and want to clear the Browse-page inflection point, lead with live viewers timed to the stream start.