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OxServer MultiUser is a multi-user Multi-Host Reupload system designed to help users manage and distribute files across multiple file-hosting platforms at the same time. It focuses on reducing the maintenance burden of multi-platform file distribution through remote upload APIs, S3 backups, automatic monitoring, and unique mirror links. It is suitable for file-sharing sites, video sites, or operations teams that need multi-mirror distribution.
Based on the product description, its core modules include Remote Upload, S3 Storage, Automatic Monitoring, Folder Organization, Unique Links, and a Queue System. Remote upload allows files to be uploaded directly to multiple hosts; each user can configure their own S3 bucket for backups; the system can automatically detect failed files and intelligently retry uploads; folders and subfolders help organize content; and each file gets a unique link that displays all available mirrors. The queue layer uses BullMQ and Redis, indicating support for asynchronous processing and batch task queuing. Third-party support includes 1fichier, Dropbox, Google Drive, and Mega, with Filemoon embed link customization also mentioned.
The page does not disclose plans, pricing, licensing model, payment methods, or any free version or trial information. Although the product name and description emphasize MultiUser, there is no further explanation of role permissions, team collaboration, audit logs, or an admin console. On the security side, the only clearly stated feature is that each user can configure an independent S3 bucket for backups; details on encryption, compliance certifications, data residency, or access control are not provided.
Its main strength is a fairly complete workflow around “multi-host upload—backup—monitoring—retry—mirror link distribution,” along with queued processing, making it suitable for batch file operations. The drawbacks are the lack of commercial information and enterprise governance details, as well as no disclosed API or developer documentation. It is better suited to webmasters and small operations teams familiar with the file-hosting ecosystem who need to build or use a professional reupload workflow.
Access from China cannot be determined from the available description. In addition, integrated services such as Google Drive, Dropbox, and Mega may face network availability limitations in mainland China, so real-world testing is required. For China-focused users, domestic object storage, CDN services, cloud drives, or self-hosted rclone/multi-cloud management solutions may be alternatives.
⚠ 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 playto.link official site.
playto.link is an Unknown File Transfer provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 5.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach playto.link directly.