
We’ve tested a bunch of different niches with this method over the years — from adult projects and blogs to course launches and investment campaigns. Some performed way better than expected, and some completely tanked. So which ones are worth the effort, and which should you probably skip? Let’s break it down.
1. The obvious winner — adult stuff.
OnlyFans promo, porn sites, webcam models, all that. Telegram has a massive gooner user base (yeah, you’d be surprised). Those people read comments, click links, and follow funnels like clockwork. It’s hands-down the most responsive niche for neurocommenting, and honestly, it’s not even close.
2. Mid-tier but scalable — “info” and money-related content.
Think dropshipping, affiliate blogs, crypto insights, streamers, “how to make X online,” or people selling their courses. These can convert really well if you have a clean, curated channel base — not the garbage you get from raw parsers. The traffic here is smarter but lazier, so you need volume and consistency to make it work.
3. The rest — everything else.
Cooking blogs, design portfolios, AI startups (surprisingly flat results), plumbers, local services… people have tried it all. But no matter how well you build the base, comments about “kitchen hacks” or “new SaaS launch” just don’t pull clicks. Telegram isn’t that kind of place — it thrives on emotion, not practicality.
At the end of the day, neurocommenting works best where curiosity and dopamine overlap. The hornier or greedier the niche, the better the numbers.
