SCAM
A public Trustpilot review titled "SCAM" says: SCAM. Purchased 1000 X followers, they came through instantly (not one at a time, literally instantly) and I lost them all hours later. Many emails back…
Exposure Page
This page is built for people searching whether SocialPlug is a scam. The pattern shown across archived complaints is consistent: payment is collected first, the promised result is disputed later, and the buyer is forced to chase delivery, chase support, or chase a refund.
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 "SCAM" says: SCAM. Purchased 1000 X followers, they came through instantly (not one at a time, literally instantly) and I lost them all hours later. Many emails back…
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.
A public review says purchased followers appeared quickly, then disappeared within hours, and support still did not refund.
A public Trustpilot review titled "SCAM!!!" says: SCAM!!! I bought 5k TikTok followers. 7 days later all of them disappeared all at the same time. They refused to refund or refill. This was after I p…
How The Trap Works
The issue is not one unhappy buyer. The issue is the same failure pattern repeating across non-delivery, drop-offs, refund refusal, store-credit diversion, and support breakdowns.
Scam Pattern
The archived pattern is not complicated. SocialPlug sells trust-facing metrics, takes payment up front, and then shifts risk onto the buyer if delivery fails, drops, or never matches what was sold.
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.
Usually because they are seeing the same danger signs other buyers saw before them: no delivery, unstable results, refund stalling, or support that stops solving the problem.
No. It is showing the repeated complaint pattern and archived evidence trail. Final legal determinations belong to regulators, payment providers, or courts.