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Dorchester Center, MA 02124

When you buy a console for the first time, it feels like you’re buying an account. In reality, you’re choosing a supplier — a person or a team you’ll come back to for every next batch. And how carefully you make that choice up front decides whether your orders turn into a calm routine or an endless hunt for a new seller after every ban.
A good supplier, like a good contractor, is something you look for once — after that, you just work with them. Let’s break it down point by point: where to look, what to check, and how to make sure the person in front of you is someone worth staying with for the long haul.
Before you message any sellers, define the task for yourself. Which GEO you need and for which platform — Apple or Google. What you plan to upload and how you’ll run things. What volume you’ll take now and how much you plan to take going forward. Whether you need an Individual or Organization account. Whether you need clean consoles or ones with an app already uploaded. Whether you have any specific requirements — a particular full name, a rare GEO, accreditation for a vertical.
This isn’t just for your benefit. A good supplier will ask these questions themselves before offering anything — and if they quote you a price right away without clarifying a thing, that already tells you something about the level of service. A clear task on your side is what the whole conversation is built on.
There are several channels for finding a supplier: niche chats and communities, developers and media buyers you know, word of mouth within the niche, ads from teams. Any of them can lead you to a strong supplier — but contacts that come by referral are especially valuable.
The source here matters no less than the supplier itself. The market is overflowing with middlemen and scammers, so a warm referral from someone who actually buys and runs traffic is worth more than a dozen cold contacts from a general chat. If someone is recommended to you, ask how long they’ve worked with them and at what volume.
Reviews are useful, but you have to weigh them. Some of the positive reviews are left by people who were sitting on someone else’s accounts and weren’t running anything grey — meaning they never really tested the accounts’ trust. So the opinion that’s worth the most comes from someone you trust who runs traffic similar to yours.
Look at the indirect signs too: how long the supplier has been on the market, whether clients come back, whether they’re willing to talk about the details of the process and not just the price. A team that works for the long haul and keeps regular clients is invested in your result — a one-off seller doesn’t care what happens to the account after payment.
Once you’ve found a contact, check them against a few signs. They’re short, but they’re exactly what separates a full-cycle team from a reseller.
They farm in-house rather than reselling — meaning they control the whole chain and answer for quality. They have basic GEOs in stock right now. They support the account for its entire lifetime, not just the 14 days that are standard on the market: they help with re-linking numbers, renewing the subscription, and so on. They justify their price with specifics and don’t race to the bottom on price. And they upload apps to their own consoles themselves, which means they know the current pass rate instead of repeating someone else’s numbers.
Prepare your side
In parallel, set up your workspace so that when the deal comes you’re not figuring out how to even open an account. You’ll need your own proxies — trusted and for the right GEO — a configured antidetect browser and, if needed, a virtual-number service. A good supplier will point you to proven proxies and services and advise you on choosing a GEO, but setting up and maintaining the environment is your responsibility. An account opened sloppily breaks no matter who you bought it from.
Even when a supplier looks perfect, don’t jump straight to volume. Take a small test batch and see how it behaves on your live campaigns — that’s the only way to check the real quality on your own traffic rather than on someone’s word. And on your first deals, use proven escrow services: you can lose money to a scam before trust even enters the conversation.
A supplier’s willingness to hand over a small batch for testing first is a good sign in itself. Someone who’s confident in their product doesn’t push for volume and is fine being put to the test.
Bringing it all together, run your future deal through these points:
Finding a good supplier is an investment that pays off with every next order. Walk this path carefully once — and from then on, instead of an endless search and rebuild, you’ll have a working channel that doesn’t let you down. A cheap account you can find in a day. A supplier you’ll stay with for years is worth taking a little longer to find.