Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
FreeVPN Pte. Ltd. is a mobile development company based in Singapore, offering VPN apps for the App Store and Google Play. Its website says its products and technologies are used by millions of users, with around 2 million monthly active users worldwide. Its Terms of Service position the product as an “anonymity and privacy service” and stress that it must not be used for crime, spam, port scanning, attacks, phishing, or other illegal activities.
Looking at key proxy/VPN parameters, the publicly available information is fairly limited. The text does not disclose the number of servers, IP pool size, countries covered, or whether it uses HTTP, SOCKS5, OpenVPN, WireGuard, or other VPN protocols. In terms of proxy type, it is clearly a VPN service rather than a traditional proxy product, and it is mainly aimed at mobile users. However, it is not possible to determine whether its exit IPs are residential, datacenter, or mobile network IPs. The number of concurrent connections is not mentioned. For bandwidth, the terms state that there is “no bandwidth or data usage limit per user,” but this is still subject to a fair use policy. Accounts may be temporarily suspended or permanently terminated if they generate bot-like behavior, excessive load, or sustained bandwidth usage significantly above the average user.
The page includes a “Pricing & Legal” navigation item, but the crawled content does not contain specific plans, prices, payment methods, refund policy, or details on free/paid limitations. As a result, its value for money cannot be assessed. In terms of service availability, the terms explicitly note that actual coverage, speed, location, and quality may vary, and that the service may be interrupted due to maintenance, third-party failures, network congestion, device limitations, and other factors.
The advantages are that the company entity, address, and email are relatively clear; the compliance boundaries are stated fairly explicitly; and the service claims not to impose a fixed traffic cap. The downside is that the information VPN users care about most—nodes, protocols, logging, pricing, payments, and customer support—is missing. In particular, the logging policy only makes general references to privacy and anonymity, without clarifying whether it is no-log, what data is recorded, or how long records are retained. For privacy-conscious users, this creates a significant degree of uncertainty.
It is better suited to ordinary users who want a basic encrypted connection and general privacy protection on mobile devices. If you need reliable region switching, clearly listed node countries, enterprise-grade concurrency, an auditable no-logs policy, or support for proxy protocols, the currently available information is not enough to confirm that it can meet those needs.
The crawled text does not provide information on accessibility from mainland China, node connectivity, app store availability, or payment methods, so its China access status should be considered unknown. If you plan to use it in China, it is advisable to first verify access to the official website, app download channels, connection success rate, and payment availability, while keeping other mature VPN or proxy services as backups.
⚠ 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 ourfreehome.com official site.
ourfreehome.com is an United States Proxies provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 5.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Limited (proxy recommended). Click "Visit Official Site" to reach ourfreehome.com directly.