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Big Apple Head sells a 5-star Google review package with a 20-working-day delivery promise. That's the whole offer. If your reputation problem is bigger than one Google order — Trustpilot, G2, app stores, or recovering from a bad month — you'll outgrow that product page on day one. Their Trustpilot also carries recent non-delivery complaints worth reading first.
OrderBoosts
You get more than a 20-day delivery window. We tell you whether Google is even the platform that's actually losing you deals, pace the campaign so reviews don't get stripped, and cover the platforms a single Google product page can't touch — Trustpilot, G2, Capterra, Yelp, TripAdvisor, Google Play, and Chrome.

Big Apple Head
Big Apple Head is a one-product checkout: pick the 5-star Google package, get the stated delivery window, with support and removal-help language on the same page. Fine if that exact product is what you came for.
Read this before you pay
These aren't our claims — they're public Trustpilot reviews and third-party site-safety checks. We're linking the sources so you can read them yourself. Profiles change, so verify before you commit money.
Trustpilot listed Big Apple Head with a strong overall score, but also a 7% one-star share. Recent complaints allege non-delivery, no response after payment, and disappearing reviews.
ScamAdviser gives bigapplehead.com an average-to-good score, while still noting low rank and a server context with many suspicious websites, so buyers should read the review profile directly.
ScamAdviser reportSide by side
Big Apple Head answers one question — 'how do I buy a Google review package?' OrderBoosts answers the question you should be asking — 'where is my rating actually losing me deals, and what's the safest way to fix it?'
| Criteria | OrderBoosts | Big Apple Head | Practical read |
|---|---|---|---|
| What you're buying | A planned campaign — platform pick, pacing, replacements, and a partner on the other end. | A 5-star Google review package with a 20-day delivery window. | One is a service. The other is a SKU. |
| Pacing | Set per platform using the Velocity Planner so reviews don't trip filters. | Gradual delivery inside a 20-working-day window — same cadence regardless of your situation. | A profile recovering from a 1-star burst needs different pacing than a fresh listing. Cookie-cutter pacing misfires. |
| Platforms covered | Google, Trustpilot, G2, Capterra, Yelp, TripAdvisor, Google Play, Chrome Web Store. | Google only on the reviewed product page. | If your buyers research you anywhere except Google, you'll need a second provider — or just one that already covers it. |
| Pricing | Public packages from $100 for 5 reviews (Google), $100 for 5 reviews (Trustpilot), $150 for 5 reviews (G2), $150 for 5 reviews (Capterra) — replacements included. | Package pricing tied to review count on the Google product page. | Compare against scope and what happens if a review drops, not against a single line item. |
| Third-party trust signal | Public Trustpilot plus listings on DesignRush, topseos, and openPR. | Trustpilot includes recent 1-star complaints alleging non-delivery and disappearing reviews. | Read both. This is the row that decides whether 'cheaper unit price' is actually cheaper. |
Why teams switch to us
A checkout sells you a quantity. We sell you an outcome — reviews that survive the filter, on the platforms that actually move your sale, with someone you can email when something needs fixing.
A SaaS prospect checks G2. A hotel guest checks TripAdvisor. A consumer app shopper checks the store. A Google-only product page can't help any of them — and most teams need more than one of these working at once.
We use the Velocity Planner to set a rate that lifts your rating without lighting up Google's filter. Twenty reviews dumped in a window is how profiles get flagged, not fixed.
If you're bleeding stars after a bad month, the math is specific — how many 5-stars to neutralize a 1-star, at what cadence, on which surface. We do that math with you before you spend.
Where Big Apple Head is fair
We won't pretend they have no merits — they do, for a narrow use case. The real question is whether that narrow use case is your situation. If it isn't, the strengths below stop being relevant.
If you want exactly a 5-star Google package and nothing else, the product page is easy to understand.
Big Apple Head publishes the delivery cadence on the page, which makes expectations clear — assuming the order actually lands as stated.
The page mentions ongoing support and review removal help. Worth weighing against the recent Trustpilot complaints about non-delivery before you rely on it.
Where reviews actually move the sale
Most providers sell you reviews on the platform they're set up for, not the one your buyers are checking. Pick the moment first — local search, B2B shortlist, app or hotel booking — then buy the reviews that show up there. That's how budget turns into deals instead of inventory.
Google and Yelp
When buyers compare nearby providers, the right plan usually needs volume, recency, response behavior, and platform-specific pacing.
G2 and Capterra
Software buyers look at review depth before they speak to sales, so the campaign should account for category intent and comparison behavior.
TripAdvisor, Google Play, Chrome Web Store
Hospitality, apps, and extensions need trust signals at the moment a prospect decides whether to book, download, or install.
If your only job is one Google order and you've read their Trustpilot reviews with open eyes, Big Apple Head will do it. If your rating is hurting, your buyers also check other platforms, or you want a real partner instead of a 20-day countdown timer, OrderBoosts is the safer call.
Show your work
Big Apple Head details are based on its public Google review product page reviewed on May 31, 2026. Public product details can change.
Before you commit
A short list of guides — ours and a couple of independent ones — covering the risks, the math, and where to double-check us. If we were trying to hide something, we wouldn't link these.
Straight answers, no hedging — the questions buyers actually ask before they pay.
Yes — and for most buyers, the better one. Big Apple Head sells a single Google review package. OrderBoosts plans the campaign across every platform that matters, paces the orders so they don't get filtered, and replaces anything that drops as part of the package.
Their overall score is decent, but recent 1-star complaints allege non-delivery, no response after payment, and reviews that disappear. That's a public profile, not our claim — open the link and decide for yourself before you pay.
If you're sure Google is the whole problem and you've read the Trustpilot record, maybe. Just know that 'we only need Google' is usually wrong — most buyers checking your Google rating also check Trustpilot, your category review site, or your app store listing within the same session.
From public Big Apple Head and OrderBoosts pages, Trustpilot, and ScamAdviser — reviewed May 31, 2026. Sources are linked at the bottom so you can verify everything yourself.
Send your current rating, review count, the platform you think you need, and your timeline. We'll come back with a plan that fits — including whether you should buy reviews at all, where, and how fast. No commitment, no upsell to a package that doesn't fit your problem.