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ReviewZerZ is a marketplace — you post a review job and hope a freelancer actually delivers. OrderBoosts is the managed alternative: we plan it, place it, pace it, and replace anything that drops. Before you sign up to either, read ReviewZerZ's Trustpilot profile — the 1-star share sits around 46% and the complaints are pointed.
OrderBoosts
You don't have to babysit freelancers, chase delivery, or argue when a review disappears. We pick the platforms that actually move your buyers, run the campaign at a pace that doesn't trigger filters, and own the outcome — not just the order.

ReviewZerZ
ReviewZerZ is a two-sided marketplace: businesses post review requests, writers pick them up, money moves through the platform with a marketplace fee. Useful if you specifically want that model and you've read what current users are saying about it.
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 ReviewZerZ with 11 reviews and a 46% one-star share when checked. Critical reviewers complained about unpaid work, missing support, and withdrawal issues.
Scam Detector gave reviewzerz.com a 50.5/100 trust score and tagged the site as questionable, with caution advised for buyers or reviewers.
Scam Detector reportSide by side
This isn't apples-to-apples. ReviewZerZ is software-as-a-marketplace. OrderBoosts is a service that owns the outcome. The right question isn't pricing — it's whether you want to manage reviewers or have someone manage them for you.
| Criteria | OrderBoosts | ReviewZerZ | Practical read |
|---|---|---|---|
| Who's running your campaign | We are. One point of contact, one plan, one owner of the outcome. | You are — coordinating freelancers through a marketplace interface. | If 'managing reviewers' isn't on your job description, this is the row that matters. |
| What happens if a review disappears | We replace it at no extra cost as part of the package. | Depends on the writer, the dispute system, and how much time you want to spend. | Reviews drop. The question is who eats the loss. |
| Platforms covered | Google, Trustpilot, G2, Capterra, Yelp, TripAdvisor, Google Play, Chrome Web Store — plus real B2B coverage. | Mostly consumer surfaces: Google, Facebook, iOS, Android, Yelp, TripAdvisor. | If your buyers are on G2 or Capterra, a marketplace can't help you. |
| Pricing | Managed packages from $100 for 5 reviews (Google), $100 for 5 reviews (Trustpilot), $150 for 5 reviews (G2), $150 for 5 reviews (Capterra) — replacements included. | Marketplace per-review pricing: roughly $10/local and $6/global on Google, plus a 15% platform fee. | Cheaper per review only if you don't count your time or the replacement cost. |
| Third-party trust signal | Public Trustpilot, plus listings on DesignRush, topseos, and openPR buyers can cross-check. | Trustpilot 1-star share around 46% with complaints about unpaid work and missing support. | Whatever you think of either site, read both before you commit money. |
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.
On a marketplace, no one owns the campaign. If reviews don't post, get filtered, or look identical, you're chasing freelancers. With OrderBoosts, the result is our job — including replacements at no extra cost.
We tell you whether Google, Trustpilot, G2, Capterra, Yelp, TripAdvisor, an app store, or Chrome is the platform that's actually losing you deals. Most teams pay for reviews on the wrong one.
Marketplaces lean local and consumer. If you sell SaaS, run a hotel, or ship an extension, the writers you need aren't on a job board — they're on our network.
Where ReviewZerZ 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.
ReviewZerZ doesn't hide the model — companies post, writers pick up, money moves through the platform. If you specifically want that, it's a clean fit.
Its Google review page lists local and global unit prices with a stated marketplace fee, which makes back-of-envelope math fast.
Google, Facebook, iOS, Android, Yelp, and TripAdvisor are all in the public nav. Useful if your campaign lives entirely inside that consumer band.
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 you want to log into a marketplace and run reviewers yourself, ReviewZerZ does that — just read their Trustpilot reviews first. If you'd rather pay one partner to plan it, run it, and stand behind the result, that's the whole reason OrderBoosts exists.
Show your work
ReviewZerZ details are based on its public homepage and Google review page reviewed on May 31, 2026. Marketplace pricing and terms 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.
Different model. ReviewZerZ is a marketplace — you self-manage freelancers. OrderBoosts is a managed service — we plan the campaign, run it, pace it, and replace reviews that drop. The 15% marketplace fee plus your time usually costs more than a managed plan once you count the chasing.
Their public Trustpilot listing showed roughly a 46% one-star share when we checked, with complaints about unpaid work, missing support, and withdrawal problems. It's a marketplace — both sides leave reviews — so the signal cuts both ways, but it's worth reading before you put any money in.
If your campaign is tiny, you're comfortable managing freelancers yourself, you don't need B2B coverage, and you've read the Trustpilot record with open eyes — a marketplace can work. For most reputation problems, the answer is no.
From public ReviewZerZ and OrderBoosts pages, Trustpilot, and Scam Detector — reviewed May 31, 2026. All source links are at the bottom of the page 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.