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Raptor is a global anonymous network acceleration proxy service aimed at individual users. Its main approach is to connect to domestic nodes via proxy software, then forward traffic through an encrypted outbound tunnel to overseas nodes before reaching the target website. The page explicitly mentions acceleration for sites such as Google, Twitter, Instagram, and GitHub, and also supports unlocking common streaming or AI services such as Disney, YouTube, Netflix, and ChatGPT.
In terms of proxy type, the main content does not state whether it uses residential, datacenter, or mobile proxies, so the source and nature of its IPs cannot be determined. Its architecture emphasizes an “all-relay mode” and a “domestic node server — overseas node server” route, making it closer to a consumer-oriented accelerator/VPN-style proxy service. For the IP pool, it only discloses 60+ domestic and international server nodes with coverage across multiple countries and regions, but provides no specific country list, cities, IP count, or information on whether IPs are dedicated. Protocols such as HTTP, SOCKS5, or specific VPN protocols are not specified; it only mentions compatibility with multiple platform apps and offers downloads for Android, Windows, iOS, and MacOS. For anonymity, Raptor claims to use strong encryption during transmission to protect privacy, but it does not disclose a no-logs policy, log retention period, or third-party audit, so its privacy transparency is limited.
Pricing is relatively low: Plan 1 starts at ¥7/month with 118G monthly traffic; Plan 2 costs ¥11 with 218G; Plan 3 costs ¥15 with 300G. All plans support monthly, quarterly, semi-annual, and annual billing. The page does not state whether longer billing cycles include discounts, nor does it disclose a refund policy. For concurrency and bandwidth, it only claims instant 4K video playback and suitability for daily work and entertainment, but does not provide key details such as the number of devices, simultaneous connections, or throttling rules.
The advantages are its low entry price, clearly stated traffic allowances, multi-platform clients, and claimed ability to unlock mainstream streaming services and ChatGPT. It also advertises 24H online customer support and displays ticket data. The downside is insufficient transparency on key technical details: there is no information on protocols, node countries, logging policy, payment methods, or concurrent connection limits. It is better suited to budget-sensitive individual users who mainly need everyday website access, video entertainment, and ChatGPT access. It is not ideal for users who require clear IP sourcing, audited compliance, enterprise-grade stability, or precise country coverage.
The main content does not state whether the website can be accessed directly from mainland China, nor does it disclose payment methods, so both China accessibility and payment convenience need to be verified in practice. Comparable services listed on the page include 91加速器, 啊哈加速器, 毒舌加速器, 快鸭加速器, 奇游加速器, 奈油, 闪连加速器, 水母加速器, 推特加速器, and others. Overall, Raptor offers attractive value for money, but its incomplete disclosure limits the level of trust professional users can place in it.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on susutown.com official site.
susutown.com is an Unknown Proxies provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 5.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach susutown.com directly.