大哥云 is a network relay/acceleration service aimed at Chinese-speaking users. Its website highlights “accelerated access to the global internet” and “breaking through restrictions,” with use cases including social networking, academic exchange, video streaming, and cross-border e-commerce. Technically, it claims to be based on the V2ray protocol, while its service terms also mention SSR services, so it can be categorized as a proxy acceleration product in the VPN/circumvention space. That said, its protocol descriptions are somewhat mixed.
In terms of nodes, the official site claims 100+ international nodes across 25+ countries and regions, while specific plans provide either 20 or 30+ exit nodes. It does not disclose the size of its IP pool, nor does it specify whether the proxies are residential, data-center, or mobile. On protocols, only V2ray/SSR are mentioned; there is no indication of HTTP or SOCKS5 support. Concurrency and traffic limits are relatively clear: plans support 10 or 20 simultaneously online devices, with monthly traffic ranging from 15GB to 150GB. The advertised use cases focus on streaming platforms such as Netflix, HBO, AbemaTV, and Spotify, as well as acceleration for common services like Apple services, Google Store, and GitHub. It also supports smart routing, with domestic Chinese websites accessed directly.
The entry price is low: the monthly trial plan costs 19.90 yuan/month and includes 100GB of traffic and 10 devices; the light monthly plan is 29.90 yuan/month with 150GB and 20 devices; and the low-traffic annual plan is 88 yuan/year, with 15GB per month. The page also shows a New Year 20% off promotion. For support, it mentions manual remote assistance and pre-sales consultation, but does not disclose ticket support, live-chat hours, or any SLA.
Its advantages are transparent pricing, a low barrier to entry, relatively complete descriptions of nodes and streaming use cases, and downloads for Windows and Android. With third-party clients, it can also support more devices. The downsides are also clear: the website does not disclose the operating entity or company location; there is no refund policy; macOS and iOS clients are marked as still in development; and the privacy policy states that IP addresses, browsing records, and other information may be logged and may be disclosed when required by law or in cases of violations. It is therefore not a strict no-logs service.
It is better suited to individual users with light to moderate needs for accessing overseas websites, watching streaming content, researching information, cross-border e-commerce, or foreign-trade communication. It is not suitable for users who need highly anonymous proxies, web scraping, enterprise-grade compliance auditing, or explicit SOCKS5/HTTP proxy support. The main content provides no reliable evidence on whether the website is directly accessible from mainland China, so its China accessibility status should be considered unknown. Before purchasing, users should prioritize any trial option and confirm network connectivity and payment methods.
⚠ 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 dage888.com official site.
dage888.com is an China Proxies provider. TG4G tracks its product information, with monthly pricing from $2.75, an overall rating of 5.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of China direct-connect friendly. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach dage888.com directly.