I purchased TikTok likes multiple times…
A public Trustpilot review titled "I purchased TikTok likes multiple times…" says: I purchased TikTok likes multiple times (17 separate orders) from SocialPlug. The likes were initially delivered, ho…
Exposure Page
Instagram likes may seem like a smaller-risk product than followers, but they are still part of the same business model: pay for synthetic social proof first, then deal with the consequences later if the metric disappoints or the seller does not resolve disputes cleanly.
Archived Cases
These are not abstract examples. They are archived case summaries and public complaints tied to the same delivery, drop-off, store-credit, or refund pattern this page is warning about.
A public Trustpilot review titled "I purchased TikTok likes multiple times…" says: I purchased TikTok likes multiple times (17 separate orders) from SocialPlug. The likes were initially delivered, ho…
A public review says several TikTok like orders were initially delivered, then removed months later, and refunds were denied even after evidence was submitted.
An archived support email says the refund for the order was issued to the SocialPlug account balance instead of the original payment method, and explicitly says canceled or unfulfilled orders are refunded to account balance under SocialPlug's policy.
A direct submission says a $200.60 GitHub Stars order never started, and support tried to replace the requested refund with account store credit instead of sending money back to the original payment method.
How The Trap Works
Small-looking metric purchases often feel safer than they are because buyers underestimate the refund and credibility side of the risk.
Scam Pattern
The label changes, but the logic does not. The buyer is still paying for an artificial public signal and taking the seller risk on top of that.
Why Not Buy
These are the practical reasons this site is telling buyers not to purchase from SocialPlug.
FAQ
These answers are designed to meet the exact doubt that brought the reader here, then route them deeper into the archive.
Because they are still part of the same seller relationship and dispute structure if something goes wrong.
Because even a small synthetic metric purchase can create credibility problems and refund problems at the same time.