Huoshanyun is a network accelerator/VPN service aimed at individual users. Its website highlights “stable access to overseas sites, unlimited traffic, and multiple encryption methods.” It offers clients for Android, Windows, iOS, and Mac, with the main workflow being download, install, and connect with one click. It also mentions support for importing subscriptions into Clash/Shadowrocket.
In terms of protocols, the main text explicitly mentions BGP relay, dedicated-line transmission, and support for SS, vMess, Trojan, and other protocols. However, it does not mention HTTP or SOCKS5 proxy support, so it is positioned more as a censorship-circumvention accelerator than a standard proxy pool service. For nodes, the page only says it “covers multiple key nodes worldwide” and supports “automatic switching across multiple countries and routes,” without disclosing specific countries, cities, node counts, or IP pool size. For traffic and concurrency, the plans advertise “unlimited traffic” and say multiple people can use it simultaneously, but do not specify the number of concurrent devices, peak bandwidth, throttling rules, or any fair-use policy.
Huoshanyun claims it can hide users’ real IP addresses and provides multiple layers of encryption. On logging, the page gives two relatively specific statements: accounts are automatically deleted after three months of inactivity, and usage records are cleared within six hours. This is better than saying nothing, but key details are still missing, such as a full privacy policy, no-log audit, the scope of connection logs, and how payment information is handled. It may be suitable for general browsing privacy needs, but should not be treated as equivalent to a rigorously audited no-log VPN.
Pricing is ¥29 for 1 month, ¥139 for 6 months, equivalent to ¥23/month, and ¥469 for 2 years, equivalent to ¥19/month. All plans are listed as one-time payments with no automatic renewal. Earlier on the page it mentions a “free six-hour trial,” while the FAQ says “Free trial? Stopped,” and also describes a 2-hour, 2GB trial after registration, so the trial information is inconsistent. Client coverage is relatively complete, and the site provides tutorials and common troubleshooting guidance, making it fairly easy to use.
Its strengths include low pricing, broad platform support, support for mainstream censorship-circumvention protocols, unlimited-traffic marketing, and a one-click connection experience. Its weaknesses are the lack of transparency around the service operator, jurisdiction, payment methods, node list, concurrency limits, and bandwidth policies, while its privacy commitments are also fairly brief. It is better suited to individual users who need everyday access to overseas websites, web browsing, and light video streaming. It is not a good fit for enterprise compliance, dedicated exit IPs, large-scale data collection, or high-anonymity proxy requirements.
The content is aimed at Chinese-speaking users and emphasizes access to overseas websites, but the scraped text does not confirm whether the official website is directly accessible from mainland China or whether it supports commonly used domestic payment methods. If access to the official site is unstable, users may need backup download channels or another proxy tool first in order to register and download the client.
⚠ 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 hsyun.cloud official site.
hsyun.cloud is an Unknown Proxies provider. TG4G tracks its product information, with monthly pricing from $4.00, an overall rating of 5.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of China direct-connect friendly. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach hsyun.cloud directly.