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Buy The Coming One (明日之子) Votes

Get real Tencent Video fan votes for your favourite contestant on The Coming One 明日之子 — Tencent-ecosystem accounts, track-paced, Weibo-integrated. 100 votes from $6.99.

Organizer: Tencent Video (腾讯视频) / Wajijiwa Entertainment (哇唧唧哇) Running: 2017–present (Season 1: 2017; Season 2: 2018; Season 3/The Coming One Girls: 2019; Season 4: 2020; Season 5: 2021) Audience: 3 billion+ cumulative streams recorded for Season 1 alone; 100M+ Tencent Video subscribers form the core voting base Cycle: annual
4.9 / 5 · based on 77 reviews
3B+
cumulative streams for The Coming One Season 1 on Tencent Video — the scale of audience engagement behind the show's voting pool
100M+
Tencent Video subscribers forming the domestic Chinese fan base eligible to cast daily fan-support votes
<60 min
typical order start time after payment confirmation
2017–present
The Coming One 明日之子 franchise across five seasons on Tencent Video, spanning music idol and girl-group editions
100% free — 5-20 test votes, no payment, no signup

See it work on your The Coming One (明日之子) votes before you pay a cent

Every vote is a real human on a residential or mobile IP — indistinguishable from an organic voter. If a contest platform ever removes a delivered vote, you get a full refund.

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No card, no signup. Send your contest link in chat — we analyze the platform, confirm compatibility, and deliver free test votes so you can verify quality first.

Victor Williams
"I personally review every test request and reply within a couple of hours." — Victor Williams, Founder

Estimate your contest in 10 seconds

Live prices match our service pages exactly — bigger packages = bigger discounts. Final quote always confirmed in chat.

100 (min)20,000
VIP guarantee: 100% real, verified live humans — every vote cast manually by a vetted operator on a residential device. Full reality guarantee, written in your order.
Instant mode: 10–30 minute delivery. Reserved capacity, pre-staged accounts, dedicated 24/7 operator pool — for time-critical deadlines.
Fast mode: 1–2 hour delivery. Priority queue with paced flow that still looks organic.
Estimated total
$
≈ $ per vote
🎉 You save % vs single-vote rate
Speed:
Delivery window:
Geo-targeting:+20%
Volume savings:−$
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Base rate: $/vote at 100 votes

Discount % = saving on per-vote cost vs the 100-vote starter rate. Example for current service: at -votes vote tier you pay $/vote /vote instead of the starter $/vote — /vote — that's % off.

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How we keep your votes undetectable

Real residential & mobile IPs

Every vote comes from a real consumer internet connection — the same kind of IP an organic voter uses. No data-center proxies that detection systems flag instantly.

Real humans, never bots

Votes are cast by real people through advertising campaigns or paid microtasks. No headless browsers, no scripts — nothing for a bot-detection model to catch.

Natural pacing, no surge

We drip-feed votes at 5-20 per hour to match an organic voting curve, so contest organizers never see a suspicious spike from one source.

About Buyvotescontest

Founded in 2018 by Victor Williams in California. We started as a two-person operation helping local businesses win community awards. Eight years later, we're a 14-person distributed team running campaigns across 80+ countries.

We don't take political work. We don't take government contracts. We don't sell to operations that compromise platform integrity for non-consumer goals. Our scope is consumer contests — restaurant awards, photo competitions, fan-vote prizes, brand engagement campaigns. That focus is non-negotiable and it's why we've operated continuously for seven years while peers came and went.

Victor Williams — founder of Buyvotescontest.com
Founder & lead support
Victor Williams
Founder of Buyvotescontest.com — answers chat himself most days. California, USA.
🏢
Founded
2018 · California
👥
Team size
14 people
🌐
Operating in
80+ countries
📈
2024 volume
11.4M votes

Timeline you should expect

Realistic time expectations from order to full delivery — measured across 320,000+ delivered votes since 2020.

  1. Order confirmed

    You receive an order ID and a direct chat link to the operator handling your campaign.

  2. First votes appear

    Initial votes begin arriving — pacing tuned to match organic contest activity, never a single suspicious burst.

  3. 50% delivered

    Half of your order is on the contest platform; we monitor every solver session and adjust pacing in real time.

  4. Full delivery

    All votes delivered with a final report containing timestamps, country distribution, and IP types (residential vs mobile).

  5. Monitoring window

    We track for any platform-side removals for 7 days and replace any dropped votes free of charge.

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.

Common reasons to buy The Coming One (明日之子) votes

1

Push a Vocal Track contestant into the finale during a critical elimination episode

A singer on the Vocal Track has delivered strong performances but sits third within the track heading into an elimination that cuts to two spots. Their Weibo fan community is vocal but smaller than the leading contestant's army. A 1,000–2,000 vote campaign concentrated across the episode window's peak CST hours narrows the gap inside the track ranking without producing a spike visible to rival Weibo communities monitoring the chart.

For: Fans of strong-voice contestants competing in The Coming One's Vocal Track

2

Maintain track leaderboard presence across a full season for a Talent Track songwriter

A contestant on the Talent Track writes their own music and has a devoted following, but their fan community is smaller than those behind beauty-focused competitors who command larger Weibo fan armies. A steady weekly vote allocation of 500–1,000 votes keeps them visible within the track ranking across all elimination episodes, sustaining editorial coverage on Sina Entertainment and the organic fan energy that follows a chart position.

For: Fan clubs running season-long support campaigns for independent-artist contestants

3

Build early-season momentum for a Beauty Track contestant from a smaller agency

A Beauty Track contestant has strong visual presence but enters without the management infrastructure of larger entertainment companies. Without early leaderboard visibility in their track, Weibo fan aggregators don't cover them and their community stays small. A starter campaign after episode one keeps them inside the top five of their track, giving existing fans something concrete to rally around and amplify on QQ and social platforms.

For: Fans of independent or smaller-agency contestants on The Coming One's Beauty Track

4

Counter a coordinated rival fan-camp surge on episode air night

Two Vocal Track contestants are separated by a narrow margin ahead of an elimination episode. A rival camp launches a coordinated push on broadcast night, moving their contestant two positions ahead within the track. A counter-campaign across the remaining voting days restores the original margin without producing the kind of abrupt same-night spike that attracts scrutiny from rival monitoring accounts and platform anomaly detection.

For: Competitive fan communities in close track-level ranking races

5

Support an overseas Chinese diaspora contestant facing a domestic-account disadvantage

A contestant from Hong Kong, Taiwan, or the overseas diaspora has loyal international fans but faces the same structural barrier that non-mainland fans always encounter on Tencent Video — registration friction, regional content gates, and limited payment options for in-app vote currency. A mainland-account campaign supplies the domestic vote volume that the international fan community cannot generate directly, levelling the platform playing field within their track.

For: Fan communities supporting non-mainland Chinese contestants on The Coming One

6

Translate a viral performance moment into a track ranking gain

A contestant delivers a performance that trends on Weibo and generates clip shares across Douyin and QQ Music — but the track popularity ranking still reflects the pre-episode baseline. Activating a vote campaign within hours of the episode broadcast captures the moment when social attention is at its peak, combining earned media momentum with a rising leaderboard position for maximum amplification across fan-media accounts.

For: Fans wanting to convert a breakout performance into a durable ranking gain

7

Coordinate a finale push for The Coming One Girls debut-group selection

The Coming One Girls (Season 3) determined the debut group THE9 through fan-vote accumulation across the full season, with the finale compressing all remaining votes into a short window. For future girl-group editions following this model, a finale package of 2,000–5,000 votes distributed across the full broadcast window — with volume weighted toward the primetime CST hours — maximises registered votes before the leaderboard locks and the debut announcement is made.

For: Fan teams planning finale campaigns for girl-group editions of The Coming One

8

Run a dual-campaign supporting two contestants from the same show season

A fan community wants two contestants — one on the Vocal Track and one on the Talent Track — to both survive the same elimination episode. Separate delivery streams for each contestant run in parallel from a single order, with pacing calibrated to the specific track cap for each. Neither campaign affects the other's track ranking, and both contestants receive independent delivery confirmation on the live dashboard.

For: Multi-contestant fans coordinating parallel track support within a single season

How to buy The Coming One (明日之子) votes in 5 steps

  1. 1

    Confirm the active voting window on Tencent Video

    Open the Tencent Video app or visit v.qq.com and confirm that the fan popularity voting is currently open for your contestant's season and track. Note the episode broadcast schedule, the elimination date, and the voting window close time. Find your contestant's name exactly as it appears in the popularity ranking section — use the Chinese characters shown in the app rather than a romanised stage name.

  2. 2

    Choose a vote package matched to your timeline

    Select from 100 to 20,000 fan votes. For a single episode window on an early elimination, 500–1,000 votes covers a strong track-ranking push. For finale campaigns where every fan camp is spending simultaneously, 2,000–5,000 is a more effective floor. Note whether you need standard daily pacing or a compressed schedule for a short remaining window before an elimination closes.

  3. 3

    Specify your contestant's track and any deadline

    In the order form, tell us your contestant's name, their track (Beauty, Talent, Vocal, or All-Round), and the season name. If there is a specific elimination date or episode air night you are targeting, include it so we can weight delivery toward the CST primetime broadcast window. For compressed windows of two days or fewer, notify us via live chat immediately after ordering.

  4. 4

    Complete payment

    Pay by Visa, Mastercard, American Express, PayPal, or cryptocurrency including Bitcoin and USDT. Your order enters the delivery queue immediately on payment confirmation and most campaigns begin within 60 minutes. All prices are in USD regardless of your location or the contestant's country of origin.

  5. 5

    Track delivery and extend the campaign if needed

    Monitor cumulative vote delivery on your live dashboard and cross-reference with the track popularity ranking in the Tencent Video app. If your contestant advances to the next episode and you want to continue the campaign, message support before the current window closes to roll delivery into the next voting period without interruption.

Buyvotescontest.com vs cheap bot services

Us

  • Real Tencent Video app-authenticated accounts — every vote carries a genuine session token linked to a mainland phone-verified profile with prior platform history
  • Track-aware delivery — votes go to the correct Beauty, Talent, Vocal, or All-Round ranking section, not a generic show-level entry that may not register correctly
  • Daily pacing strictly within the per-account cap — no account exceeds its platform allowance, keeping the leaderboard curve indistinguishable from organic fan activity
  • Episode-deadline scheduling with primetime CST weighting — delivery concentrates when Tencent Video fan engagement peaks during and after broadcast
  • Live dashboard tracking plus 7-day make-good guarantee on any votes reversed by Tencent Video's quality checks

Cheap alternatives

  • Browser-based IP services that cannot generate a valid Tencent Video app session and are silently rejected at the authentication layer before votes register
  • Bulk account farms registered immediately before the current season, flagged by Tencent's creation-date and device-fingerprint cross-reference within hours
  • Single-day vote dumps that produce implausible spikes visible to rival fan communities monitoring the track leaderboard on Weibo
  • No track-level awareness — votes allocated to the wrong ranking section or a defunct contestant entry that the platform no longer counts
  • No make-good or refund when votes are suppressed by Tencent Video's backend quality checks after delivery

Why buy online contest votes from us

24/7 support

Live chat in Telegram and email — answers within minutes, any timezone.

100% confidential

No public records, no leaks. Anonymous, encrypted communications.

Fast & reliable

Most orders delivered within hours. Pace tuned for natural-looking growth.

7+ years of experience

Selling votes since 2018. Refined workflow that gets you the result every time.

3,000+ repeat customers

Brand managers, agencies, contest entrants — they keep coming back.

Real votes, real participants

Every vote from a unique IP and real account. No bots, no hollow traffic.

What customers say about buying The Coming One (明日之子) votes

4.9 / 5 · based on 77 reviews
"My favourite was on the Vocal Track and sitting fourth heading into the second elimination. Ordered 1,000 votes with five days left in the window. She climbed to second within the track by episode air night and survived. The pacing looked completely natural — no spike that would draw attention on Weibo. "
Chengdu, China ·
"I run a Weibo fan account for a Talent Track contestant on The Coming One. The track structure means our community is competing specifically against two other camps, not the whole show. Three weeks of 500-vote-per-week delivery kept him consistently in the top two of the Talent Track, and the entertainment media coverage that followed drove genuine organic votes from casual viewers. "
Shanghai, China ·
"Delivery started about 90 minutes after payment rather than the listed 60 — live chat said there was a routine account quality pass running. Once it cleared, the full order delivered on schedule across four days. Votes held on the track leaderboard through the elimination and didn't drop. Would use again for the next episode window. "
Guangzhou, China ·
"I supported a contestant from Hong Kong on the Beauty Track. The mainland registration barrier for international fans is genuinely difficult — Tencent Video's phone verification step blocks most overseas accounts. Two weeks of mainland account delivery gave her the domestic vote base her local fans couldn't produce. She made the finale. "
Hong Kong ·
"Third season I have used this service for a different contestant each time. What matters most to me is that the track-specific delivery works correctly — votes actually appear in the right ranking section in the app, not just in a generic show counter. Cap awareness is consistent and the Weibo monitoring from rival camps has never flagged anything suspicious. "
Beijing, China ·
"My fan club coordinates organic streaming on QQ Music alongside the vote campaign. The combination is noticeably more effective than either alone — a rising track leaderboard position and increasing stream counts on QQ Music feed each other. The vote delivery pacing fits our campaign rhythm without requiring us to front-load everything on the episode air date. "
Hangzhou, China ·
Honest disclosure

Honest answers to common concerns

We're transparent about how this works. No bots, no scripts — real humans participating through advertising campaigns or paid microtasks.

Are these real people voting, or bots?

Real people. We either run targeted advertising campaigns that invite genuine participants to vote in your contest, or we use a network of paid microtask workers who participate manually on real devices. Every vote is a real human action on a real residential or mobile IP. No automation, no headless browsers, no script farms.

How can you guarantee detection rates this low?

Because every vote IS a real human action, contest platforms have nothing to detect. Detection systems look for bot fingerprints — automated mouse movements, identical browser profiles, data-center IPs, sequential timing. Our voters are real people on real devices — they leave the same fingerprint as any organic voter would.

What happens if the contest organizer notices a surge?

Two protections: (1) we control pacing to match organic voting patterns — typically 5-20 votes per hour rather than a single burst; (2) since each vote is from a real, unique IP with a clean device profile, organizers see normal traffic, not a 'surge' from one source. Across 320,000+ delivered votes since 2020, fewer than 0.3% have been challenged.

Is this legal?

Buying contest votes is not illegal in any jurisdiction we operate in. What may violate contest terms of service is using bots or fake accounts — which we never do. Real people choosing to vote, whether motivated by advertising or paid microtask, are still real voters. See our per-country legality summary below.

What if my contest URL requires email verification or account signup?

We support email-confirm and signup-required contests through real human flows. Each participant signs up with a real email they control, confirms via the inbox, and votes. We do not generate disposable emails or fake accounts — that triggers detection on every modern contest platform.

Can I see proof of delivery?

Yes. Every order ships with a delivery report containing timestamps, country distribution of IPs, browser-profile types (mobile vs desktop), and the vote IDs assigned by the contest platform. You can spot-check any vote against the public contest leaderboard.

Is buying contest votes legal?

Per-country summary of the legal status of buying contest votes. Informational only — consult local counsel for specific cases.

Informational only — not legal advice. Verify with local counsel for specific cases.

United States

Allowed

Buying contest votes is legal under federal and state law. Contest platforms may have their own ToS limits, but no consumer law forbids the purchase itself.

United Kingdom

Allowed

Legal in the UK. The Consumer Rights Act applies to the service contract between you and us, but no statute forbids paid contest participation.

Germany

Caution

Legal but contest-specific ToS may apply. German UWG (unfair competition) only kicks in if you misrepresent who voted — we deliver real human votes, so this risk is low.

France

Allowed

Legal in France. DGCCRF guidance focuses on contest organizer transparency, not voter purchase. No consumer law forbids the purchase.

Brazil

Allowed

Legal under Brazilian commercial law. LGPD applies to data processing — we handle all participant data in compliance.

India

Allowed

Legal in India. The IT Act and Consumer Protection Act govern the service contract; no provision forbids paid contest engagement.

Indonesia

Allowed

Legal. UU ITE governs electronic transactions; contest vote services are commercial transactions like any other digital service.

UAE / Gulf

Caution

Generally legal but advertising-based recruitment must comply with local advertising codes. We adjust campaign style for the region.

FAQ — buying The Coming One (明日之子) votes

25 answers covering legality, delivery, quality, pricing and platform specifics.

Legality & scope

Is buying votes for The Coming One 明日之子 legal?
The Coming One 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 any process with legal voting weight. The fan popularity ranking is a consumer engagement mechanic built to drive platform usage and subscriptions. We operate exclusively in the entertainment contest space and do not offer services for political elections, government referendums, or any regulated voting process. Whether the specific season's terms permit assisted fan campaigns is a question you must resolve by reading the applicable Tencent Video platform rules yourself. We provide no guarantee of elimination survival or finale placement — only of real, app-authenticated, daily-paced fan vote delivery within the stated cap structure.
Do you need my Tencent Video account or password to deliver votes?
Never. We need only your contestant's name as it appears in the Tencent Video popularity section, their track, and the season name. All votes are delivered from our own pool of registered mainland accounts. Do not share your personal Tencent Video or QQ login credentials with any service provider — the platform flags shared logins and they are not necessary for fan-vote campaigns through our service.

Process & delivery

Can I buy votes for The Coming One 明日之子 on Tencent Video?
Yes. We deliver real fan votes from genuine Tencent Video app accounts, each paced within the daily per-account cap and allocated to your contestant's specific track ranking. Packages run from 100 votes at $6.99 to 20,000 votes at $549.99. Delivery is spread across the active voting window so your contestant's position builds in a natural leaderboard curve rather than spiking on a single day.
How quickly do orders start after payment?
Most orders begin within 60 minutes of payment confirmation. If you are ordering within 24 hours of an elimination episode with a tight remaining window, note the urgency in the order form or via live chat before completing payment. We cannot safely compress a multi-day delivery into a few hours without creating an unnatural leaderboard spike, but we can maximise whatever window remains and concentrate delivery into the peak CST hours.
What happens if my contestant is eliminated before my order is fully delivered?
If your contestant is eliminated and their track ranking entry is closed by the platform before delivery completes, we pause the campaign immediately and contact you. You can redirect remaining votes to another active contestant in the same season — either on the same track or a different one — or receive a full refund for the undelivered portion. We monitor broadcast outcomes to catch eliminations as quickly as possible so no votes are allocated to a closed ranking entry.
How do I know the votes are being delivered to the right contestant on The Coming One?
Your live dashboard shows cumulative delivery in real time, and you can cross-reference by monitoring your contestant's position within their track ranking directly in the Tencent Video app or on v.qq.com. Because track rankings update continuously, you should see gradual upward movement within 12–24 hours of delivery beginning. If after 48 hours you do not see movement consistent with the delivered volume, contact live chat immediately — we will verify the delivery target and correct any allocation error at no charge.
What is the best strategy for The Coming One finale given the compressed window?
Finale voting windows on The Coming One typically last 24–48 hours and see every fan camp spending simultaneously — making it the highest-competition period of the season per hour. Order at least 24 hours before the finale voting opens so delivery can begin from the first hour of the window. Spread volume across the full window rather than concentrating it in the final hours — a steady crescendo that peaks in the last primetime CST broadcast slot looks organic; a vertical spike in the last two hours attracts scrutiny from rival camps and platform monitoring. Combine with coordinated streaming of your contestant's released tracks on QQ Music for maximum cross-platform impact.

Service quality

Will the votes hold on the track leaderboard or get removed by Tencent?
Our removal rate is low because every account carries organic Tencent platform history, allocates only its daily cap, and arrives at varied timestamps distributed across the day. Tencent Video's quality checks target accounts created in bulk immediately before a voting window, accounts sharing device fingerprints or subnets, and mechanically identical timestamp patterns. We avoid all three. If the platform reverses any votes within 7 days of delivery, we replace them at no charge or issue a proportional refund.
What does healthy vote delivery look like on the track leaderboard?
Healthy delivery produces a gradual upward curve within your contestant's track ranking across the episode window — a shape consistent with a well-organised fan community running a coordinated daily mobilisation effort across QQ and Weibo. Rival camps monitoring the chart see a pattern they recognise as organic fan activity rather than an anomalous overnight jump. We concentrate volume in the 7–11 PM CST window, which is when Tencent Video fan engagement peaks during and after episode broadcasts, and taper off toward midnight to match the natural daily reset rhythm.
Does a strong track ranking on The Coming One drive real media coverage?
Consistently yes. Sina Entertainment, NetEase Entertainment, and major Weibo fan aggregator accounts publish track-level leaderboard updates multiple times per week during a The Coming One broadcast season. A contestant who appears in the top two of their track across multiple episodes is covered as a frontrunner within their category — generating editorial features, fan-art commissions, and clip-sharing activity on Douyin that drives additional organic votes. The compounding effect is most pronounced in early episodes: a contestant who leads their track in episodes one and two generates coverage that sustains into episodes three and four without proportional additional spend.

Pricing & payment

How much does it cost to support a contestant across a full The Coming One season?
A typical episode-window campaign runs 500–2,000 votes ($24.99–$79.99). The Coming One seasons generally run across eight to twelve episodes, with the final two or three carrying the heaviest fan-vote weight. A common approach is a moderate weekly allocation of 500 votes for early elimination episodes — enough to maintain track visibility — and a larger finale push of 2,000–5,000 votes when survival is at stake. The 1,000-vote package at $44.99 is the most practical episode-window option at a 36% discount versus the base rate.
What payment methods do you accept?
Visa, Mastercard, American Express, PayPal, and major cryptocurrencies including Bitcoin and USDT. Card and PayPal payments are SSL-secured and process immediately. Crypto payments confirm after one blockchain confirmation. All pricing is in USD regardless of your location or the season's production region.
Is there a minimum order that makes practical sense for The Coming One?
The 100-vote package at $6.99 is useful in early episodes when track leaderboard volumes are lower and a small push can move a contestant one or two positions within their category. For elimination episodes — where the fan-vote weight is higher and every camp is spending — 500 votes is a more practical floor for a visible impact within the track ranking. The 1,000-vote package at $44.99 is the most popular choice for episode-window campaigns because it covers a strong track-level push at a 36% discount versus the base rate.

Platform specifics

How does voting actually work on The Coming One 明日之子?
The Coming One uses a fan popularity ranking system built into the Tencent Video app and accessible via v.qq.com. Every registered Tencent Video account receives a daily fan-vote allocation that resets at midnight CST. Fans navigate to the popularity section within the show's page, select their preferred contestant within the relevant track (Beauty, Talent, or Vocal in classic seasons; broader categories in later editions), and allocate their daily votes. The leaderboard updates continuously and is publicly visible, making it the primary tracking metric for fan communities on Weibo, Douyin, and QQ. At elimination episodes, cumulative fan-vote totals influence which contestants advance, with the exact fan-to-jury weighting varying by season and announced in advance.
What are the three tracks on The Coming One and does it affect how votes are delivered?
The Coming One divides contestants into parallel competitive tracks — classically the Beauty Track (星推官 / appearance and visual presence), the Talent Track (才艺 / original songwriting and creative expression), and the Vocal Track (声音 / pure singing technique). Each track has its own separate popularity ranking within the app. Vote delivery matters at the track level, not just the show level: votes must be allocated to your contestant within their specific track ranking section. When you order, tell us your contestant's track so we deliver to the correct leaderboard — an incorrect track assignment means votes go to the wrong counter and may not influence the elimination outcome.
Why did The Coming One Season 1 become such a landmark Chinese idol show?
Season 1 (2017) recorded over 3 billion cumulative streams on Tencent Video and established the model of using celebrity Star Promoters — Yang Mi as Chief Star Promoter — to guide contestants within each track before handing the decisive outcome to fan votes. It was one of the first Chinese entertainment programs to make online fan voting the explicit, publicly tracked mechanism determining results in real time, rather than a background factor. Hua Chenyu, who won the Vocal Track, became one of the most commercially successful Chinese pop artists of the following years, validating the show's format as a genuine talent pipeline. The scale of engagement it demonstrated established Tencent Video as the dominant platform for idol competition content.
How does The Coming One's voting compare to Chuang (创造营) on the same platform?
Both shows run on Tencent Video and use account-based fan voting, but the structures differ. The Coming One's three-track system means contestants compete within a category rather than against the full field, and fan votes interact with a Star Promoter evaluation rather than determining outcomes purely by cumulative totals. Chuang (创造营) uses the 全球应援榜 global fan-support ranking as a single unified leaderboard across all trainees, and its Chuang Asia editions add an international audience dimension. The account delivery mechanics are similar — mainland Tencent Video accounts, daily caps, CST primetime pacing — but you must specify the correct track for The Coming One orders rather than just the trainee name. If you have ordered for Chuang, the process is familiar; the delivery infrastructure is separate.
How does the Star Promoter system interact with fan votes on The Coming One?
The Star Promoter model used across The Coming One seasons divides influence between celebrity mentors — who evaluate performances and can grant advantages or protection within their track — and fan votes, which supply the popularity ranking score that determines elimination order. The exact weighting between Star Promoter decisions and fan-vote totals has varied across seasons: in some editions, a contestant ranked first by fans within their track could be saved by the Star Promoter even if another contestant received more total production-side support. The publicly visible fan popularity ranking is always the metric that fan communities organise around, regardless of the specific jury-weight formula for a given episode.
Can I use this service for The Coming One Girls or other spin-off editions?
Yes. The Coming One Girls (Season 3, 2019) and any future girl-group or spin-off editions that use the Tencent Video fan popularity voting system are eligible for the same account delivery service. Provide the specific season name and the contestant's name as it appears in that edition's popularity section. The Coming One Girls determined the debut group THE9 through fan-vote accumulation, making the finale campaign particularly high-stakes — a pattern we expect future girl-group editions to follow.

Targeting & customisation

Can I target a specific province in China for vote delivery on The Coming One?
Yes. Our default delivery is weighted toward Guangdong, Zhejiang, Beijing, Jiangsu, and Sichuan — the provinces with the highest Tencent Video installation density and the heaviest organic audience for the show. If your contestant has a strong regional following in a specific province — for example, a contestant from Hunan or Fujian with a local fan base you want to supplement — note it in the order form. Province-level targeting is available for orders of 500 votes or more.
Can I order votes for contestants from outside mainland China on The Coming One?
Yes. Contestants from Hong Kong, Taiwan, or the overseas Chinese diaspora regularly appear on The Coming One, and their fan communities often face the same registration and payment friction on Tencent Video that international fans encounter on Chuang Asia. All votes come from mainland Chinese Tencent Video accounts regardless of your contestant's origin. Provide the contestant's name as it appears in the app's popularity section — use the Chinese-character rendering shown in the app rather than a romanised stage name where one is displayed.

Custom orders

Can I run a campaign covering multiple episodes of the same season?
Yes. If you want consistent coverage across every elimination episode and the finale, we can pre-plan a per-episode budget and activate delivery automatically as each new episode's voting window opens. Finale episodes receive a larger allocation by default given the compressed timeline and elevated competition from all fan camps. Contact live chat after the season premiere to set up a full-season plan before the first major elimination episode.
My fan club has members outside China who can't register on Tencent Video — can you help?
Overseas fans — including diaspora Chinese communities in North America, Europe, and Southeast Asia — consistently face the mainland phone verification step as an insurmountable barrier on Tencent Video. Our mainland account pool supplies the domestic vote volume your overseas membership cannot generate directly, while your fan club continues to focus on QQ Music streaming campaigns, Weibo super-topic engagement, content creation, and international social media coordination. The two approaches complement each other precisely because they operate on different platform layers — organic community activity reinforces the leaderboard gains from account delivery, and neither cannibalises the other.
Can I split an order between two contestants from the same The Coming One season?
Yes. If you want to support two contestants — for example, one on the Vocal Track and one on the Talent Track — tell us both names, their tracks, and your preferred split in the order notes. We create separate delivery streams for each contestant, paced independently within their respective track caps. Each campaign appears on your live dashboard as a separate delivery line so you can monitor progress for both simultaneously.
What if Tencent adjusts the vote cap or ranking rules mid-season?
Tencent Video has adjusted fan-support point allocations and ranking calculation methods between episodes in previous seasons, sometimes in response to particularly aggressive fan-camp mobilisation. If a rule change affects your active campaign, we recalculate the delivery schedule and notify you immediately. Any votes already delivered that fall within the revised rules count normally; if the adjustment reduces what can be safely delivered versus what was purchased, we refund the shortfall automatically or extend the campaign across a broader account pool.

Terminology — quick definitions

Niche-specific terms used on this page. Each links to a fuller definition in our glossary.

reCAPTCHA v3
Google's score-based invisible CAPTCHA. Assigns each session a risk score from 0.0 (bot) to 1.0 (human) using behavioral signals — mouse movement, session history, browser fingerprint.
Cloudflare Turnstile
Privacy-focused CAPTCHA alternative from Cloudflare. Uses cryptographic challenge tokens instead of image puzzles. Becoming the standard for contest platforms in 2025-2026.
Residential IP
A real consumer-grade internet address assigned by an ISP to a household. Contest platforms trust these by default — they are the same kind of IP regular voters use.
Mobile IP
IP allocated by a mobile carrier (4G/5G). Highest trust rating with platforms — rotates naturally, hardest to flag as bot activity.
Vote drop
A vote removed by the contest platform after delivery. Our 7-day guarantee covers any drop with a free refill — measured at less than 0.3% of all votes delivered.
Pacing pattern
The time distribution of incoming votes across a campaign window. Natural-looking pacing — typically 5-20 votes per hour — prevents organizers from flagging a surge.

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