Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Outsite Project positions itself as a “high-level academic roaming project.” Launched in 2018, it uses a referral/invitation model and targets needs such as student use, academic research, access to educational resources, and foreign-trade communication. The page frames the service with terms like “courses” and “teaching points,” but judging from its descriptions of nodes, cross-platform clients, content unlocking, and cross-border access, it is essentially a personal global network access/VPN-style service.
In terms of node coverage, the page lists “teaching points” such as Los Angeles, Tokyo, Novosibirsk, Hong Kong, Shanghai, New York, Vienna, Singapore, and Turkey. However, it does not disclose the total number of countries, total nodes, IP pool size, or IP type, so it is not possible to determine whether these are residential, data-center, or mobile proxies. At the protocol level, it also does not specify whether HTTP, SOCKS5, or common VPN protocols are supported. Concurrency and bandwidth details are relatively clear: plans generally support 1 or 3 devices, with traffic ranging from 30G/month to 280G/month, while the annual Ultra plan offers 1000G/year. Advertised maximum speeds are 1000Mpb/s or 2500Mpb/s. On privacy, the page claims it has no permission to view and does not store browsing history at all, but it does not further explain connection logs, account logs, or third-party audits.
Pricing is its standout selling point. Monthly plans include Essential at ¥5/month, Premium at ¥12/month, and Pro Max at ¥24/month; annual plans include options such as ¥130/year, ¥188.99/year, and ¥259/year. The overall entry cost is low, making it suitable for budget-conscious users, but traffic allowances differ between “per month” and “per year” across plans, so buyers should check the details carefully before purchasing.
The advantages are low pricing, support for multiple platforms including Windows/macOS/Linux/Android/iOS/PlayStation, and the availability of tutorials and customer support. Its use cases are also fairly clear, including academic literature access, news and information, content unlocking, and communication with overseas clients. The drawbacks are that the invitation model makes access harder, while proxy protocols, IP attributes, payment methods, refund policy, and SLA are all undisclosed, resulting in limited technical transparency.
It is better suited to individual users who have a referral channel, are price-sensitive, and mainly need it for academic resource searches and light to moderate overseas access. Access from China cannot be confirmed based on the page alone, and it is also unclear whether the domain is directly reachable or whether payment is convenient. If you need enterprise-grade stability, clearly stated protocols, or a large-scale proxy pool, it is better to compare it with more transparent commercial VPN or proxy services.
⚠ 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 outsite.space official site.
outsite.space is an Unknown Proxies provider. TG4G tracks its product information, with monthly pricing from $0.14, an overall rating of 7.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of China direct-connect friendly. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach outsite.space directly.