Real-looking Kick chatters added to your live stream's chatter list while you broadcast, in idle mode or sending custom messages on a slow drip. Orders typically start within 60 seconds because the channel has to be live for chatters to join. No password ever required, only your public Kick channel URL. Used by streamers, agencies, and reseller panels through our dashboard and REST API.
We never ask for your password. Zero risk of channel suspensions.
Channel Must Be Live
Start the stream first, then order. Chatters join the live chat session and disappear when the stream ends.
Idle or Custom Messages
Pick silent chatters that sit in the list, or chatters that send custom messages on a slow drip.
24/7 Support
Real humans ready to help you anytime, day or night.
Service Details
What You Actually Get
The concrete characteristics of NLO SMM's Kick chatter services, written without marketing fluff.
Live Chatter-List Presence
The ordered quantity joins the chatter list shown next to your Kick chat while you stream. The chatter count visible to viewers and clip-watchers reflects the added accounts. Lower tiers use older recycled accounts, premium tiers use accounts with chat history.
Idle Mode or Custom Messages
Idle chatters sit in the chatter list and do not speak. Custom-message services pull from a list of phrases you provide and send them on a slow, randomized drip so the chat feels active without spamming. Both modes are stated in the service name.
Bound to the Live Stream
Chatters are session-bound. They join while the stream is live and drop off when you end the broadcast. Refill warranty does not apply because the metric resets each stream. The next stream needs its own order, or a multi-stream package.
Fast Start
Standard-tier orders typically begin filling the chatter list within the first minute after payment, which matters because your live window is the only time chatters can join.
No Credentials Required
Orders use your public Kick channel URL only. There is no OAuth flow, no password field, no third-party app authorization. The channel must be live and chat must not be in subscriber-only or followers-only mode so the supply can post and stay connected.
Public REST API
The full REST API at /api covers order placement, status, balance, and bulk operations. Streamers fire chatter orders automatically via webhook the moment the stream goes live. Standard rate limits apply.
Process
How Ordering Works
The full flow from account creation to delivery. Five steps, with one Kick-specific timing rule.
1
Create an Account
Free signup, email and password only. No card details required at signup.
2
Add Funds & Open Chat
Top up the balance and check that chat is not in subscriber-only or followers-only mode, so chatters can join and post.
3
Start the Stream First
Go live on Kick before placing the order. The channel has to be broadcasting for chatters to join. Do not order before the stream is live.
4
Paste Channel URL & Pick Mode
Public channel URL only, never your password. Choose idle or custom-message mode. If custom, paste the phrase list.
5
Track in Dashboard
Order status updates in real time. The chatter count in your stream's chatter list rises within the first minute or two of placement.
Customer Feedback
Verified Reviews on Trustpilot
Our reviews live on Trustpilot, so they are independently verifiable, not testimonials we wrote ourselves.
When you buy Kick chatters, you are paying for other accounts to join your live chat while you broadcast so the chatter list next to your stream looks populated. You hand over your public channel URL, not your login, and the panel routes the order to a network of accounts (premium tiers) or older recycled accounts (standard tiers) that connect to the chat session. The chatter count viewers see in the chat sidebar rises accordingly, and depending on the service the chatters either sit silently in the list or post messages from a phrase list you provide.
Chatters and viewers are different metrics on Kick. Viewers are people watching the video player, counted in the live viewer number at the top of the stream. Chatters are accounts currently connected to the chat room, counted in the chatter list visible next to the chat. A stream can have many viewers and few chatters (lurkers who do not chat) or fewer viewers and many chatters (engaged audience). The chatter count is what visitors look at to decide whether the chat feels active when they land on the channel mid-stream, and it is what regulars use to gauge whether a streamer's community is alive. The companion service for viewer count is at Buy Kick Viewers.
Kick chatters are session-bound. They join while the stream is live and drop off when the broadcast ends. There is no persistent "chatter on file" between streams, which means every stream that needs the lift needs its own order, or one of the multi-stream packages that fires automatically through the API when you go live.
Kick is a livestream-first platform. When a viewer lands on a channel mid-stream, the chat panel is the first social signal they read. An active chatter count tells them other people are in the room paying attention, which makes them more likely to stay past the first 30 seconds, follow, and come back. A near-empty chatter list on a channel with hundreds of viewers reads as a lurker audience that does not engage, and the viewer often clicks away.
The same signal feeds Kick's discovery surface. Channels in the directory and category pages are sorted partly by viewer count, but category browsers click into channels that look active. A channel showing a strong chatter list compared to its viewer count attracts more clicks per impression in the directory than a channel with the same viewer count and a dead chat. Over many streams this compounds into more raw exposure from category browsing, which is the realistic mechanism through which a healthier chatter count converts to organic growth.
A chatter-to-viewer ratio that reads as natural for engaged streams sits roughly between 20 and 60 percent depending on the category, with high-engagement niches like Just Chatting and Slots running higher and large-audience gaming streams running lower. When you size the chatter order, target a count that brings the ratio into that range against your live viewer count rather than flooding the chatter list with numbers that do not match the visible audience. Pair with Kick viewer orders if you also need the viewer number lifted to match.
Quality Tiers and Chat Modes
The Kick chatter services on NLO SMM split along two axes: the quality of the supply accounts and the chat mode (silent or message-sending). Both are stated in the service name.
Idle Chatters (silent, list-only)
The lowest price point. Supply accounts connect to the chat room and appear in the chatter list but do not post messages. The chatter count rises, the list looks populated, and chat stays at its organic message rate. Useful when the only goal is to make the chatter sidebar look active and you do not want bought messages mixed into the chat log.
Custom-Message Chatters
Supply posts messages drawn from a phrase list you provide, on a slow randomized schedule so the chat reads as a casual conversation rather than a wall of bot output. Good phrase lists pull from the actual category (gaming reactions, slot pulls, viewer questions about the stream topic) so the messages match what the stream is about. Costs more per chatter than idle mode. The service name and ordering form indicate when phrase input is required.
Premium Real-Account Chatters
Accounts with chat history on other Kick channels, established usernames, and existing follow lists. They look credible if a moderator or viewer clicks a username to inspect the profile. This is the right choice for channels with engaged regulars who notice when chat looks off, and for partnership-grade streams where the chat list will be screened.
Multi-Stream Packages
Some services bundle chatter delivery across multiple streams (a week of regular broadcasts, or a fixed total broadcast-hour count) wired through the API to fire automatically when you go live. Cheaper per stream than ordering separately, and built for streamers on a daily schedule.
Unlike follower or subscriber services where the metric persists on the channel, Kick chatters are a live-session metric. They join while you are broadcasting and disconnect when the stream ends. There is no "chatter on file" after the broadcast closes, which means refill warranties do not apply because the metric the refill would protect resets every stream by design.
During the live window the chatter count is typically stable. The supply maintains the connection for the duration of the order (a stated number of hours), and Kick does not aggressively churn chatters the way platforms churn followers or likes. If the count drops mid-stream through provider error, support resolves it through the dashboard or the REST API. After you end the stream, the chatter list resets to zero and the next stream needs its own order.
This makes the right structure for regular streamers a multi-stream package or an API-triggered auto-order rather than a one-off per broadcast. Set up the webhook once, and chatter orders fire each time you go live without manual placement. The API section below covers the wiring.
Safety, Bans, and What Kick Actually Detects
Kick's terms of service prohibit artificial inflation, but enforcement targets specific behavior, not the fact that a channel had chatters. The patterns Kick acts on are credential stuffing, accounts running automation tools against the platform from the streamer side, repeated platform abuse reports, and content policy violations in the broadcast itself. An external service that has other accounts connect to your public chat does not match those patterns.
This is why NLO SMM only needs your public channel URL. There is no login, no OAuth, no password, no admin access, and nothing installed on the streamer's account. Because no software touches your account, a chatter order cannot trigger the account-side enforcement that gets channels banned. The relevant safety surface is what your channel itself does: do not run third-party automation on your streaming machine, do not abuse Kick's chat APIs from your own account, and keep the broadcast within Kick's content standards.
An honest caveat belongs here: no provider can guarantee against future platform policy changes, and anyone promising a permanent guarantee is overstating it. Keep the chatter count plausible against your viewer count (within the 20 to 60 percent range engaged streams produce), and the order will read as ordinary audience activity rather than a flag worth investigating.
Filling the Chatter List as the Stream Builds
The shape of the chatter list during the first 30 minutes of a stream matters as much as the final count. A list that starts near zero and grows steadily as your viewer count climbs reads as an organic audience showing up. A list that pops from zero to several hundred in 90 seconds while viewer count is still in single digits reads as inflation, and viewers who notice the mismatch click away.
Drip the chatters in over the first 20 minutes
For most streams the right setup is a drip delivery that fills the chatter list over the same window your viewer count is climbing. Standard tiers offer a drip option that paces the chatter connections so the list grows naturally rather than landing as a block. Match the drip duration to how long it normally takes your stream to reach steady viewer count.
Keep the chatter-to-viewer ratio inside the natural range
If your stream typically pulls 400 viewers, ordering 1,200 chatters creates a 300 percent ratio that visibly does not match the audience. Stay inside the 20 to 60 percent range natural engaged streams produce. If the goal is to lift both numbers, pair the chatter order with a viewer order sized to match.
Custom messages on a slow drip
If you ordered custom-message chatters, the message schedule is paced so phrases land at conversational intervals rather than as a stream of bot output. The phrase list quality matters: short, on-topic, in the voice of the category. Avoid generic phrases like "great stream" or "love the content" since they read as bot output to anyone reading the chat.
NLO SMM exposes a public REST API at /api covering order placement, status checks, balance queries, and bulk operations. For streamers, the most useful pattern is a webhook on your stream-start event (from your broadcasting setup or a Kick channel status poller) that posts an order to the API the moment you go live, so the chatter list fills as the stream begins without you having to remember to place an order before pressing Start.
Two groups rely on it. Streamers running daily broadcasts wire the auto-fire once and forget about it; every stream gets the lift without manual work. Agencies managing multiple Kick streamers push chatter orders across rostered channels from a single balance, often triggered by a webhook on each streamer's posting schedule. Reseller panels connect their own storefront to NLO SMM as an upstream provider and forward chatter orders through the API; if you run one, the child panel option is built for exactly this. Standard rate limits apply, higher limits are available on request through the dashboard.
For streamers running a full Kick strategy, ordering chatters alongside viewers, followers, and clip views through one balance is simpler than juggling several providers. Fund the account once on the add funds page and the API draws from that balance.
Who Uses This Service
Buying Kick chatters is mostly about making the chat panel look populated so visitors who land mid-stream stay past the first 30 seconds. The realistic buyer pool includes:
New streamers building early traction, filling the chatter list so the channel reads as an active community rather than an empty room when category browsers click in.
Established streamers running off-peak hours, keeping the chatter count consistent during late-night or weekday daytime windows where the regular audience is thinner.
Streamers pursuing partnership criteria, lifting chatter and viewer counts so the channel passes engagement screening with Kick partners and brand-deal coordinators.
Talent agencies and management firms, maintaining consistent chatter metrics across rostered streamers through the API.
Streamers running paid sponsorship streams, ensuring the sponsor sees a credible chatter count in the chat sidebar during the campaign window.
Reseller panels, child-panel operators sourcing Kick chatter services from NLO SMM and reselling to their own customers.
What unites them is a first-impression and partnership-credibility goal: make the chat look alive so the natural audience grows around it rather than past it.
Mistakes That Hurt Results
Buying chatters can compound a real chat community or read as a transparent inflation block, depending on execution. These are the avoidable errors.
Ordering before the stream is live
The channel has to be broadcasting for chatters to connect to the chat room. If you order before pressing Start, the order has no live session to join and either fails or sits unstarted until you actually go live. Start the stream first, then order, or wire the API auto-fire so the order triggers on stream start.
Chat in subscriber-only or followers-only mode
If chat is restricted to subscribers or followers, supply accounts that are neither cannot post messages. Idle chatter services still work (connecting to the room without speaking) but custom-message services will silently fail to send. Switch chat to standard mode before ordering message-sending chatter services.
Buying more chatters than your viewer count supports
If your live viewer count is 80 and you order 1,000 chatters, the 1,250 percent ratio is visibly impossible and viewers who notice it click away. Stay inside the 20 to 60 percent chatter-to-viewer range engaged streams naturally produce. Pair chatter orders with viewer orders if you need both numbers lifted in proportion.
Generic phrase lists for custom-message chatters
Phrase lists made of "nice stream", "great content", "love this" read as bot output to anyone scrolling the chat. Build a list of short, on-topic phrases that match the category and what is happening in the stream. The cost difference between custom and idle is wasted if the messages are obviously generic.
Using any service that asks for your password
No Kick chatter service needs your password. Your public channel URL is the only input required. Treat a password request as a reason to leave, since password-based services are exactly what triggers Kick's account-side enforcement.
Frequently Asked Questions
Pricing depends on the chat mode (idle vs custom-message), the quality tier (standard vs real-account), and the duration of the live session. Idle standard chatters are the cheapest; custom-message and real-account tiers cost more. Multi-stream packages reduce the per-stream rate compared to one-off orders. Exact rates show live in the order panel above. The full catalog is on the services page.
Yes. Chatters connect to the live chat room, which only exists while you are broadcasting. Start the stream first, then place the order so the supply can connect immediately. The alternative is wiring the API auto-fire to a stream-start webhook so the order triggers automatically when you go live.
Viewers are people watching the video player, counted in the live viewer number at the top of the stream. Chatters are accounts connected to the chat room, counted in the chatter list next to the chat. They are separate metrics on Kick and have separate services. Most streams run a healthy chatter-to-viewer ratio between 20 and 60 percent depending on category. For viewer count specifically, see Buy Kick Viewers.
Both options exist. Idle chatters connect to the room and appear in the chatter list without posting any messages. Custom-message chatters post from a phrase list you provide on a slow randomized schedule so the chat reads as casual conversation. The service name states the mode and the ordering form asks for the phrase list when custom mode is selected.
Chatters disconnect when the live broadcast ends, because the chat room itself closes. The chatter list resets to zero and the next stream needs its own order. Refill warranty does not apply to chatter services because the metric is session-bound by design. Streamers on a regular schedule typically use multi-stream packages with API auto-fire instead of placing separate orders.
It depends on the service. Idle chatters connect to the chat room and appear in the list regardless of restriction mode. Custom-message chatters need to post, so subscriber-only or followers-only mode blocks the messages from going through. Switch chat to standard mode before ordering message-sending services, or stick to idle chatters if you want to keep the chat restricted.
It is safe when the provider never requests your password and never logs into your account. NLO SMM only needs your public channel URL. No credentials, no app authorization, no automation on your streaming machine. Kick's enforcement targets accounts that run automation on themselves, not accounts that gain chatters from external accounts joining the public chat. Do not run third-party automation on your account. No provider can guarantee against future policy changes.
For the duration stated on the service, typically a fixed number of hours starting from when the order activates. Drip-delivery services pace the connections over the first 15 to 30 minutes of the stream so the chatter list grows naturally. When the order duration ends, chatters disconnect cleanly. When the stream ends before the order duration, chatters drop off with the broadcast and any unused time does not roll over.
Yes. The REST API at /api covers order placement, status checks, balance, and bulk operations, used by streamers and agencies. For Kick chatters specifically, the API is most useful wired to a stream-start webhook so chatter orders fire automatically the moment a broadcast goes live, beating the need to remember to order before pressing Start. Reseller child panels forward orders through the API and resell to their own customers. Standard rate limits apply; higher limits available on request.
Credit and debit cards, cryptocurrency including Bitcoin, Ethereum, and USDT, and several regional processors. Available methods are listed on the Add Funds page after you create an account.
Order Kick Chatters
Real-looking chatters added to your live chat while you broadcast, idle or custom-message mode, drip-filled over the first minutes of the stream so the list grows naturally. Sub-60-second start, public REST API for auto-fire on stream start, public channel URL as the only required input.