No configuration needed — click any button to instantly copy "please" repeat text to your clipboard. Copy and paste 100 to 1000 times
The softest, most genuine please — repeated 100 times for when once is never enough. You can write here.
Perfect copy-paste please message for your WhatsApp chats — sincere and impossible to ignore.
For the moments when you need someone to stay and words alone don't feel like enough.
For those nights when you can't sleep and just need them to reply.
When you've hurt someone and need them to know you genuinely mean it.
Short, clean, and straight from the heart — no explanation needed.
For the silence that hurts more than any argument ever could.
For intense moments when you've run out of ways to ask and this is all that's left.
Quick and heartfelt please — ready to copy and paste anywhere in seconds.
For the people who left and the part of you that hasn't stopped asking them to return.
Sometimes "please" once just doesn't cut it. Whether you're begging your best friend to stop ignoring you, convincing your partner to agree to something, or just dramatically pleading with someone who's being stubborn — use this generator to send please 100 times copy and paste straight into WhatsApp, Instagram, or Telegram in one click. With their name, with emojis, exactly the way you need it.
Copy button not responding? Select All → Ctrl+C on Windows or Cmd+C on Mac. Works on every device and browser.
There is a version of "please" that gets ignored. It's the one sent alone, in a single text, with no context and no weight behind it. And then there's please 100 times copy and paste with emojis — which nobody ignores. Not because it's loud, but because it fills the entire screen with the same word over and over until the other person genuinely cannot pretend they didn't see it.
The emoji you choose completely changes how the message lands. A hundred "Please 🥺" reads as soft, vulnerable, and genuinely heartfelt. A hundred "Please 😭" is dramatic and funny. A hundred "Please 🙏" is serious and respectful. Pick the one that matches what you're actually feeling — or the one most likely to work on the specific person you're sending it to.
WhatsApp is where most of these land — and it handles long messages perfectly. Up to 65,000 characters per message means even 1,000 repetitions of "Please 🥺" arrive as one unbroken wall. Generate, copy, open the chat, long-press the message field, paste, send.
Here's what each count actually communicates on the receiving end:
There's a meaningful difference between "Please" repeated 100 times and "Please Jaan 🥺" repeated 100 times. The name turns a wall of text into something directed — personal, intentional, and considerably harder to dismiss. Every line carries their name, which means every line is aimed at exactly one person. That specificity is what makes it land.
Some combinations worth trying:
Some situations genuinely call for a thousand pleases. Not because the other person is unreasonable — but because what you're asking for matters enough that a single word sent once doesn't come close to communicating how much. A thousand lines of "Please 🥺" filling someone's screen is impossible to read as casual. It stops them. It makes them sit with it. It shows the size of the feeling behind the request.
Is it over the top? Completely. Is it effective? Surprisingly often. The combination of humor and genuine sincerity that a please flood carries is hard for most people to say no to — because it shows you cared enough to be ridiculous about it. And caring enough to be ridiculous is, in most relationships, a form of love. 🙏
The generator works with any language — type it the way you'd actually say it and it repeats exactly as written. Here are the versions that work best with this tool:
Whatever language you share with that person — type it in, set your count, and send it. The tool repeats exactly what you write, in exactly the language you write it.
| Platform | Best Count | How It Lands |
|---|---|---|
| 100 – 5,000 | Best platform. ~65,000 chars per message — 1,000 pleases arrive as one unbroken wall. Impossible to miss. | |
| Telegram | 100 – 10,000 | Handles the longest messages of any app with zero splits. For maximum please energy, this is the platform. |
| Instagram DMs | 100 – 500 | Full support in DMs. Comments cap at 2,200 characters — keep it under 100 for comments, DMs for anything bigger. |
| iMessage | 100 – 1,000 | Arrives as one complete message, no segments. If they have read receipts on, you'll know exactly when the please flood landed. |
| SMS | 50 – 100 | Splits into segments — all arrive in sequence. Keep count lower for cleaner delivery. Each segment is its own notification. 🥺 |
| Discord | Under 200 per message | 2,000 char limit. Send in rounds — a server channel getting flooded with please messages in waves hits differently. 😭 |
| Snapchat | 100 – 300 | Works in chat. Large counts may split into multiple snaps — they all arrive, just in waves of desperation. |
| Up to 10,000 | No character limit. Subject line: "I just need one thing." Body: 10,000 pleases. The most formal desperate request possible. |
There's a simple reason a single "please" gets ignored and a hundred of them don't — it's not about volume, it's about visibility. One please sits in a chat next to twenty other messages and disappears into the scroll. A hundred pleases takes over the entire conversation. There is no scrolling past it. There is no pretending it wasn't seen. It's there, it fills the screen, and it demands a response in the way that a single word almost never does.
The other thing a please flood does that a single please can't — it shows the size of the want. When you genuinely need something from someone and a hundred attempts at the same word arrive in their chat, the message underneath all of them isn't just "please." It's this matters enough to me that I'm being ridiculous about it. And in most close relationships, that kind of transparent, unguarded wanting is more persuasive than any carefully constructed argument. 🥺
Most people under-ask. They send one please, get no response, and assume the answer is no — when really the answer was just "I didn't notice" or "I wasn't sure you meant it." A hundred pleases removes both of those possibilities entirely. They noticed. They know you meant it. Now it's their turn.
Generate your please flood, put their name on every line, pick the emoji that fits the moment, and send it. Whatever you're asking for — you already know it's worth asking for properly. 🙏