Jarvee Tutorial ›
Panicking, he reopened the tutorial. At the very bottom, in tiny, grey font, was a final note he had missed:
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." jarvee tutorial
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. Panicking, he reopened the 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: The tutorial said: "Do not follow their followers
"Before you touch Jarvee, scrub your account. Delete any post that smells of desperation. Remove followers who are bots or porn. You are building a temple. Do not invite demons."