Why a separate viewer instead of X itself
X (formerly Twitter) aggressively rate-limits the public reply view: large viral tweets often show only 10-50 visible replies before "Something went wrong" or "Twitter is over capacity" interrupts. Replies are also re-ordered by an opaque ranking that hides chronological context. This viewer fetches the full visible reply tree once and lets you browse, search, and sort it without the X UI rate-limit popups.
What you can do that you can't on X itself
- Cmd/Ctrl-F search any keyword, @mention, or hashtag across the full reply tree.
- Sort by like count — find the replies the audience actually rallied around.
- Filter "verified only" — see exactly which blue-tick accounts engaged.
- Filter by follower count — surface replies from high-follower accounts (potential influencer engagement).
- See each reply's permalink — for citing in reports or sharing back.
- Copy or export — one click sends the thread to your clipboard or to an Excel/CSV file via the exporter.
Use cases
- Crisis response — when a viral negative reply chain hits a brand tweet, see the full thread instantly without endless scrolling.
- Influencer discovery — replies under a major industry tweet often contain next-tier creators in the same niche.
- Sentiment scan — quickly read every reply to a launch tweet to gauge market reaction before your own follow-up.
- Customer feedback — under a feature-announcement tweet, replies often surface specific feature requests or complaints.
Plan limits
Per-tweet size scales with your plan. Free (no signup): up to 100 results per tweet. Personal: 5,000. Premium: 50,000. Business: 250,000 — see pricing for the full feature comparison and API tiers for the API-specific limits.