TL;DR
'This Feeling Must Be Real' is one of the tracks associated with Skool Boyz, a late-80s British pop act. It is not a feature, classroom, or community on skool.com. The spellings overlap by accident — 'skool' was an 80s pop branding flourish and again a 2019 SaaS branding flourish. Different worlds. If you came for the song: jump to the song section. If you came for the platform (Sam Ovens, Alex Hormozi, paid communities), the platform section covers what skool.com is and what tools4skool layers on top of it. Both are honestly addressed below — no upsell theatrics, just the actual answer to whichever query brought you here.

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The Song 'This Feeling Must Be Real'
Skool Boyz tracks like 'This Feeling Must Be Real' belong to a specific texture of British pop — late 80s into early 90s, glossy synths, layered harmonies, lyrics that lean unapologetically romantic. The title itself signals what the song is doing: a young narrator talking themselves into believing a feeling is the genuine article and not a passing fancy. That's a well-worn pop trope, and Skool Boyz worked it cleanly. The song was never a chart juggernaut, which is why finding it cleanly online in 2026 takes effort. YouTube collectors have the cleanest uploads. Streaming availability fluctuates as compilation licenses rotate. If you remember the track from a specific moment — a TV ad, a school dance, a friend's mixtape — that's likely doing more work than any chart position the song earned. Decades-old pop survives in memory networks more than in algorithms. Type the title in quotes plus '1989' on YouTube and you'll find a few uploads. Pick the one with the cleanest mastering. None of this connects to skool.com — we're stating that bluntly because the spelling overlap routes a lot of search traffic to the wrong place.
About Skool Boyz
Skool Boyz were a UK pop act with a small, scattered discography. Their tracks — including 'This Feeling Must Be Real', 'Before You Go', 'Your Love', 'Superfine', and 'This Is the Real Thing' — surface in fan circles, niche compilations, and YouTube re-uploads. The act didn't generate the kind of biographical paper trail a major group leaves, so most of what's online is fan-curated. That's not a knock — it's just the reality of mid-tier 80s UK pop. If you want the cleanest source on the band, Discogs is your best bet for confirmed pressings and credits. Wikipedia's coverage is patchy. Most lyric sites have user-submitted content that may or may not be accurate. The best way to confirm anything is to listen to a primary source upload and verify against any released compilation. None of this involves skool.com — the community platform that shares the spelling for completely separate reasons.
Skool.com — The Platform That Shares the Spelling
Skool.com is a community SaaS launched in 2019 by Sam Ovens. Alex Hormozi is the most visible promoter. It combines a feed, a classroom (course player), gamification (member levels earned by posting), and a calendar — all behind a paywall the creator owns. Creators run paid masterminds, coaching, and free communities on it. Platform pricing for creators is around $99/month per group; member subscription pricing is whatever the creator sets. The platform is intentionally lean on operations — there's no native DM automation, no churn alerts, no CRM, no scheduled-post retry logic. Creators stitch those workflows together with extensions and external tools. That's why a category of 'skool tools' exists — including tools4skool, which adds DM sequences, a 60-second Churn Saver, slash commands in the inbox, a Comment Miner for lead capture, scheduled posts with a Post-Now button, and a Kanban CRM. Free plan covers one sequence and 20 DMs/day; paid plans start at $29/month.
If You're Running a Skool Community
The work that breaks creators isn't the content — it's the operations. Welcome DMs that need to fire on signup. Cancellation recovery within 60 seconds. Comment-to-DM lead capture on viral posts. Knowing which members are about to churn before they actually do. None of that ships in the box on skool.com. Most creators handle it by hand for the first few months, then either burn out, hire a VA, or install automation. tools4skool is in the third bucket — Chrome extension that uses your existing skool.com session (no password sharing), runs DM sequences with multi-condition triggers, image DMs, churn risk scoring, and member CSV export. Real proof: Kate Capelli ran the Churn Saver and went from $59/month spent to $4,000/month in additional recovered MRR within two weeks. That's a 7,000% ROI line. Not every creator hits that number, but the math works at much smaller scales too.
FAQ
See the FAQ section below for specific common questions about the song, the band, and the platform.
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