About The Coming One (明日之子) votes
The Coming One (明日之子) is Tencent Video's flagship music idol survival format — a show that pioneered the model of making every online viewer a decisive vote-caster rather than a passive audience member. Since its debut in summer 2017, the series has accumulated over 3 billion cumulative streams for its first season alone and has run continuously through five editions, including a dedicated girl-group season and a later all-round skills format. Fan popularity votes cast through Tencent Video, QQ Music, and the broader Tencent ecosystem directly influence which contestants survive elimination rounds and which go home. The gap between a contestant who makes it to the finale and one who is eliminated mid-season is not purely a matter of talent — it is a matter of how effectively a fan community can mobilise daily votes across the platform. Packages start at 100 votes for $6.99 and scale to 20,000, with most orders entering the delivery queue within 60 minutes of payment. Provide your contestant's name as it appears in the Tencent Video app, their current track or season, and any episode deadline you are working toward.
About the The Coming One (明日之子) votes contest
Tencent Video launched The Coming One (明日之子) in June 2017 in partnership with Wajijiwa Entertainment (哇唧唧哇), the management company founded by music producer and talent scout Da Zhang Wei (大张伟). The show introduced a structural innovation that distinguished it from earlier Chinese talent competitions: rather than a single audition pool, it divided contestants into three parallel tracks — the Beauty Track (超级星推官, focused on visual appeal and star presence), the Talent Track (才艺赛道, focused on original songwriting and creative expression), and the Vocal Track (声音赛道, focused on pure singing technique). Each track had its own Star Promoter — a prominent celebrity who guided contestants within that lane — with Yang Mi serving as the headline Chief Star Promoter for Season 1. Hua Chenyu emerged as the fan-voted winner of Season 1's Vocal Track, going on to become one of the most commercially successful Chinese pop artists of the following years. Season 2 (2018) continued with the three-track format, while Season 3 (2019) pivoted entirely to a girl-group edition, The Coming One Girls, producing the debut group THE9 after an intense fan-vote finale. Season 4 (2020) and Season 5 (2021) explored expanded skill categories and a broader geographic trainee pool. Throughout every edition, the Tencent Video fan popularity ranking has been the primary engine driving the competition's outcomes and its social media narrative.
Why The Coming One (明日之子) votes matter for your contest
The fan popularity ranking on The Coming One is not a secondary metric — it is the primary public-facing scorecard that determines the social media story of the entire season. Chinese entertainment outlets including Sina Entertainment, NetEase Entertainment, and hundreds of Weibo fan aggregator accounts publish leaderboard updates multiple times per week, and a contestant who consistently ranks in the upper tier of their track receives editorial coverage, sponsored content opportunities, and the organic fan momentum that turns a competition appearance into a long-term career. The three-track structure of The Coming One adds a layer of competition that other Chinese idol formats lack: within any given season, a contestant is competing not just against the full field but specifically against the other contestants on their track, where fan vote totals determine who advances from that category. A small vote gap within a track can be decisive in ways it would not be in a single-pool competition. The daily vote cap per Tencent account also creates a structural constraint: no single fan, however dedicated, can supply more than one account's daily allowance. Scaling a lead requires scaling accounts — and that is exactly what an account delivery campaign provides. For contestants with strong overseas Chinese diaspora support, the registration friction of mainland Tencent Video accounts is a genuine barrier that a mainland-focused campaign directly addresses.
How we deliver The Coming One (明日之子) votes
After you confirm your contestant's name as it appears in the Tencent Video popularity section, their track (Beauty, Talent, Vocal, or All-Round depending on the active season), and any episode deadline you are working toward, we build a daily delivery schedule calibrated to the current season's per-account vote cap. Every account in our pool is a genuine Tencent Video registration — linked to a mainland Chinese phone number, carrying organic app-usage history across Tencent's ecosystem of drama, variety, and music content, and active across QQ Music and the broader platform prior to the current season. We allocate each account's daily vote allowance to your contestant within their specific track ranking section and ensure no account exceeds its daily cap. Our mainland IP distribution is weighted toward Guangdong, Zhejiang, Beijing, Jiangsu, and Sichuan — the provinces where Tencent Video's installation density is highest and where The Coming One's organic audience is heaviest. Delivery volume concentrates in the 7–11 PM CST window, when Chinese fans are actively watching episodes and logging in to vote. We spread arrival times across the evening to produce a gradual leaderboard curve consistent with organised fan mobilisation rather than an artificial overnight spike. If any account fails a platform quality check during your campaign, we replace it and make up the affected votes at no charge.
How we avoid platform detection
Tencent Video's popularity voting system authenticates at the account level — every vote allocation requires a valid Tencent Video app session token tied to a phone-verified profile with a device fingerprint consistent with an established user. Browser-based click services and cookie-injection tools cannot generate a genuine Tencent Video app session and are rejected at the authentication layer before votes register on the leaderboard. Tencent's anomaly monitoring cross-references account creation dates, device IDs, and voting-pattern timing against normal app behaviour baselines across the platform. Accounts registered in bulk immediately before a voting window opens, accounts sharing subnets or device IDs, and vote-arrival timestamps that are mechanically identical minute-by-minute are all flagged and suppressed. Our accounts predate current seasons and carry activity histories across Tencent Video's full content library — drama, variety, sports, and music — so their voting behaviour sits within a normal usage profile rather than appearing as a purpose-built voting instrument. We never batch-allocate votes at a fixed clock time, which is among the most reliable detection triggers on Tencent's platform. The resulting leaderboard movement looks statistically indistinguishable from a well-organised Chinese fan community running a coordinated daily vote campaign on QQ and Weibo. Any votes reversed by the platform within 7 days of delivery are replaced in full or refunded proportionally.
What is the best voting strategy for The Coming One (明日之子) votes?
The three-track structure of The Coming One means your strategy should be track-specific rather than show-wide. In the early episodes, focus on keeping your contestant consistently visible within their own track ranking rather than chasing an overall show leaderboard position that may not exist in the same visible form. Fan media on Weibo covers track leaders separately, so a contestant who leads or sits second within the Vocal Track will receive dedicated coverage even if their total vote count appears modest relative to the Beauty Track front-runners. Start your campaign from the first elimination episode rather than the finale — the narrative payoff of appearing in fan aggregator posts as a consistent track leader amplifies organic votes across subsequent episodes in a compounding pattern. For the finale, where debut positions or winning status are determined, increase your package to the 2,000–5,000 range and distribute delivery across the full finale voting window rather than concentrating it in the final hours. A steady crescendo through the window looks natural; a sudden overnight climb in the last few hours attracts attention from rival fan camps monitoring the chart on Weibo. Combining account vote delivery with fan-organised streaming of your contestant's performance clips on QQ Music and Tencent Video — where stream counts also feed into some seasons' popularity metrics — multiplies the effect of the vote campaign.
Legal scope and terms
The Coming One (明日之子) is a commercial entertainment variety program produced by Tencent Video and Wajijiwa Entertainment — a private streaming platform's original content, not a government election, regulated ballot, or process with legal voting weight of any kind. The fan popularity ranking is a consumer engagement mechanic designed to drive platform usage, streaming numbers, and subscription retention. We provide vote delivery services exclusively for entertainment contests of this type. We do not offer services for political elections, government referendums, regulatory votes, or any voting process that carries legal consequence. Whether a specific season's official rules permit assisted fan campaigns is a determination you must make by reading the applicable terms on Tencent Video's platform yourself. We provide no guarantee of a specific elimination outcome or finale result — only of real, app-authenticated, daily-paced fan vote delivery within the platform's stated per-account cap structure.
Getting started in two minutes
Ordering takes roughly two minutes. In the order form, enter your contestant's full name as it appears in the Tencent Video fan popularity section — use the Chinese-character name shown in the app rather than a romanised stage name wherever possible. Specify the season and, if applicable, the track (Beauty, Talent, Vocal, or All-Round). Choose a package from 100 to 20,000 votes and note any episode air date or elimination deadline you are working toward. Complete payment by Visa, Mastercard, American Express, PayPal, or cryptocurrency; your order enters the delivery queue immediately and most campaigns begin within 60 minutes of payment confirmation. If you want to extend a campaign across multiple episodes or into the finale, contact live chat before the current window closes to roll delivery into the next voting period without a gap.