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EdNovas 云 positions itself as a Chinese-language proxy/VPN service, with its landing page highlighting “100+ global nodes, 80+ countries and regions, high speed and stability, privacy and security.” Its core use case is helping users access the global internet, and it explicitly advertises support for unlocking streaming platforms such as Netflix, Hulu, and Disney+. The service covers Windows, Mac, Linux, Android, iOS, and routers, making it suitable for multi-device setups.
Node coverage is its main selling point: premium and most overseas-user plans list 80+ countries/regions and 100+ nodes, with popular locations including the United States, Hong Kong, Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan. The entry-level plan offers 5+ countries/regions and 30+ nodes. For network routes, it mentions “Guangzhou-Hong Kong IEPL / Shanghai-Japan tunnel outbound routes” and “premium lines up to gigabit ports,” but the main text does not disclose specific protocol types, the number of concurrent devices, speed-limit rules, or an SLA. As a result, real-world stability should still be verified through a trial.
The plan structure is fairly granular: monthly plans range from ¥25/month for 100GB to ¥250/month for 1000GB. Annual plans include holiday-limited low-traffic packages, as well as full-node options such as ¥180/year for 200GB total and ¥500/year for 600GB total. Overseas-user plans range from ¥30/month for 200GB to ¥100/month for 800GB, marked with a 5x multiplier, and return-to-China nodes can be customized separately. There is also high-end private customization offering one dedicated node, available via private TG chat. Students can apply for a 40% discount using an education email address and class schedule.
On privacy, the page says it only collects the registration email address and promises no backdoors. However, it also clearly notes that “return-to-China nodes keep logs,” while only other nodes are claimed to protect privacy. For users with strong privacy requirements or high-risk use cases, this is an important limitation to watch. Support channels include Telegram group/private chat, Discord, and email, with response times stated as 12–48 hours; fault repair is also listed as 12–48 hours. Refunds are only supported to account balance, so flexibility is average.
Its strengths are broad country coverage, many plan options, a relatively low entry price, and clear separation between streaming and overseas return-to-China needs. Weaknesses include limited disclosure around protocols, payment methods, concurrency, the full node list, and logging details, while abuse may result in immediate account suspension. It is better suited to general cross-border browsing, streaming, students, and overseas users who need return-to-China nodes. If you require strict no-logs guarantees, enterprise-grade compliance, or clearly defined SOCKS5/HTTP proxy capability, you should evaluate it carefully.
The main text does not state whether ednovas.me is directly accessible from mainland China, nor does it disclose payment methods. Given the nature of the service, it is advisable to prepare a backup network before registering, subscribing, or using it, and to start with a low-cost short-term plan to verify availability. No alternative services are provided in the main text.
⚠ 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 ednovas.me official site.
ednovas.me is an Unknown Proxies provider. TG4G tracks its product information, with monthly pricing from $3.45, an overall rating of 7.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of China direct-connect friendly. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach ednovas.me directly.