Qifei Accelerator is a network acceleration/VPN-style product aimed at individual users. Its website highlights “one-click access to the global internet,” “cross-platform compatibility,” and “data encryption.” Based on the page content, it offers clients for iOS, Android, Windows, and Mac, with one account usable across phones, computers, and tablets. Its main use cases are accessing overseas websites, social media, and streaming services.
In terms of proxy type, the page does not state whether it uses residential IPs, datacenter IPs, or mobile IPs, so it is not possible to assess the quality of its IP sources. The size of its IP pool is also not disclosed; it is described only in broad terms such as “global nodes” and “high-speed global servers,” without details on countries, cities, routes, or availability. As for protocols, the website does not mention HTTP, SOCKS5, or standard VPN protocols, referring only to a “self-developed communication protocol” and “Flash Connect” technology. For bandwidth and concurrency, the page claims “unlimited-speed global nodes” and support for 1080P to 4K streaming, but it does not provide hard metrics such as bandwidth caps, throttling rules, or the number of devices that can be online at the same time.
The page clearly mentions “daily check-ins for permanent free use” and says users can receive free usage time by checking in daily after downloading the app. This is the main visible pricing-related information. However, the website does not show paid plans, prices, refund policies, rules for free usage time, or traffic limits, making it difficult to assess long-term costs. If you plan to use it for stable video streaming or frequent access, it is worth confirming in advance whether there are hidden speed limits, queues, or paid premium nodes.
Its advantages are a low barrier to use and an emphasis on one-click connection; it also offers broad client coverage. The website claims support for services such as Netflix, TikTok, YouTube, Facebook, and Twitter, as well as 4K viewing. The drawbacks are also fairly clear: the company entity, location, node scale, protocol details, logging policy, payment methods, and customer support channels are not clearly disclosed in the main content. Although the page mentions “anonymous browsing” and “encryption technology,” it provides no independent audit or detailed no-logs commitment, so users with strong privacy requirements should be cautious.
It is better suited to ordinary individual users who want a simple way to access overseas websites, social platforms, cross-border shopping, or streaming services, especially those who want to try it first using the free time from daily check-ins. The page repeatedly mentions use in China, bypassing blocks, and accessing Google/YouTube, so access from China should be considered “partially restricted”: the product’s target scenarios include the Chinese network environment, but actual connectivity will vary depending on routes, region, and time. The main page does not provide information on payment methods or alternatives, so before purchasing, users should first verify website accessibility, customer support responsiveness, and refund terms.
⚠ 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 sdljc.com official site.
sdljc.com is an China Proxies provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 4.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach sdljc.com directly.