Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
SkyBridge is a global connectivity service aimed at individual users. Its website highlights “stable, high-speed, ready to use immediately after activation,” and positions it for everyday browsing, streaming, remote work, and multi-device use. In practice, the service appears closer to a subscription-based proxy/VPN-style connectivity tool: after logging in to the member center, users receive a dedicated subscription URL and QR code, which can then be imported into common client apps.
Based on the information collected, SkyBridge offers “50+ selectable routes” and says it covers multiple regions and entry points. Its node list is continuously updated, allowing users to choose routes according to their needs. However, the page does not disclose specific countries, cities, IP pool size, or whether the IPs are residential, datacenter, or mobile proxies.
On protocols, the page only mentions subscription URLs, QR codes, and compatibility with common clients. It does not clearly state support for HTTP, SOCKS5, or any specific VPN/proxy protocol. Concurrency and bandwidth are also not specified. It only says the member center shows plan details, used traffic, device count, and expiration time, so the plans likely include traffic and device limits, but the exact quotas are unknown. Anonymity and logging policies are not mentioned at all, so users with privacy-sensitive use cases should evaluate it carefully.
The pricing page says plan names, billing-cycle prices, and plan resources are read directly from the backend database, and mentions common billing cycles such as monthly billing. However, in the captured text, the plans were still shown as “loading,” with no actual prices displayed. Ease of use is one of the service’s clearer strengths: after activation, users can import the configuration via subscription URL or QR code, while orders, plans, traffic usage, expiration time, and customer support are all centralized in the member center. This reduces the friction of setting up new devices and handling after-sales communication.
Its advantages include relatively flexible route selection, transparent usage tracking, and access to human customer support. It is suitable for ordinary users who need everyday browsing, streaming, remote collaboration, file/data syncing, and multi-device use. The downside is the lack of disclosure around key information: protocols, node countries, bandwidth, concurrency, logging policy, actual pricing, and payment methods are not specified. As a result, it is less suitable for professional proxy users who require strict compliance, fixed regional exits, or strong anonymity.
The captured text does not state whether the official website is directly accessible from mainland China, whether its nodes work reliably in China’s network environment, or which payment methods are supported. Therefore, china_access can only be marked as unknown. Users in mainland China should first confirm website accessibility, payment options, client compatibility, and refund rules. It is also worth comparing SkyBridge with other proxy/VPN services that publicly disclose node regions, supported protocols, privacy policies, and plan pricing.
⚠ 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 cn9.top official site.
cn9.top is an Unknown Proxies provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach cn9.top directly.