Jarvee Tutorial [work] -
It snowballed. Jarvee was now a gentle, persistent rain. By following the engagers of his own growing posts, he created a feedback loop. New fans found his page, engaged, and Jarvee welcomed them like a quiet butler. He hit 2,500 followers. Then 4,000.
"Jarvee is a scalpel, not a chainsaw. Set your Follow delay to 45-65 seconds. Daily follow limit: 120. Daily unlike limit: 100. If you go over, the Algorithm notices. The Algorithm is a sleeping dragon. Do not wake it."
On Day 24, Leo got cocky. He wanted to test the limits. He added a sixth mother account and bumped the daily follow limit to 180. He went to bed feeling like a king. jarvee tutorial
This was where Leo almost ruined everything. His instinct was to go fast. More follows = more growth. The tutorial had a red, bolded warning:
It wasn't a slick YouTube video. It was a 14-page PDF titled by a user named GhostInTheShell . The tone was brutal, direct, and oddly compelling. It snowballed
Leo set his delays. He felt like a safecracker, not a marketer.
A trickle. Then a stream. A post of a pink-grid sunset over a city got 200 likes—his highest ever. The comments weren't "Nice pic!" but real conversations. "Where did you find this track?" "This gives me major Drive vibes." His follower count hit 1,200. New fans found his page, engaged, and Jarvee
Leo found @SynthwaveShores, @NeonDrifter, and three others. He copied their follower lists into Jarvee’s "Follow" tool. The tutorial said: "Do not follow their followers. Follow the people who on their last three posts. Those are the living. The followers list is a cemetery."