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."
It worked. Leo felt a shiver. He was a ghost, unseen.
Leo sighed, staring at the blinking cursor on his screen. His Instagram theme page, @RetroWaveNights, was dying. He posted manually, three times a day, engaging with a handful of comments, but his follower count had flatlined at 847. The big accounts were growing by thousands a week, and he knew their secret: automation. jarvee tutorial
Leo set his delays. He felt like a safecracker, not a marketer.
Nothing happened. Jarvee quietly followed 80 accounts a day, liked 90 posts, and slowly unfollowed the non-reciprocators from two weeks ago. Leo checked his phone obsessively. No growth. He almost turned the speeds up. He didn't. Leo found @SynthwaveShores, @NeonDrifter, and three others
He bought a month’s subscription and a cheap proxy. Then he found the tutorial.
Panicking, he reopened the tutorial. At the very bottom, in tiny, grey font, was a final note he had missed: Follow the people who on their last three posts
After an hour of digging through Reddit threads and dodging obvious scams, he found it. Jarvee. The software looked like it was built in 2005—a dense, grey interface with more tabs than a filing cabinet. But the tutorials promised the world: auto-follow, auto-like, auto-comment, all on autopilot.