Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Routuber is a home router aimed at users in Russia, with its main selling point being that access to overseas services is handled at the router level. Users plug their ISP cable into the WAN port, then use a phone or computer to enter the admin panel and set the Wi‑Fi name, password, and administrator password. After that, phones, TVs, laptops, game consoles, and other devices can all use the same network without being configured one by one. The page also introduces the Routuber GO portable router, which can get internet access via SIM or Wi‑Fi and share it with laptops, TVs, and consoles.
From a proxy/VPN perspective, the information Routuber discloses focuses more on hardware and usage scenarios than on node specifications. The page does not state whether the proxy type is residential, datacenter, or mobile, nor does it disclose IP pool size, country coverage, HTTP/SOCKS5 support, or specific VPN protocols. It mentions a “KВН” mode that takes effect after being configured once on the router, with rules applied to selected services while the rest of the traffic continues to use the local ISP’s default route. This is close to a service-based split-routing setup. For concurrency, it only says the router can serve multiple home devices, and emphasizes stability, resistance to evening peak congestion, video calls, and gaming latency, but provides no device count or speed figures.
The page includes a “choose a plan” option, suggesting there may be hardware or service packages, but the main text does not provide prices, billing cycles, traffic limits, refund terms, or renewal information. For support, the page states that support is available 7 days a week, and says devices are checked before shipment to ensure they power on and can distribute Wi‑Fi, with brief startup instructions included.
The main advantage is ease of use, making it suitable for unified household access. It supports scenarios involving YouTube, Netflix, Spotify, Oculus, ChatGPT, GitHub, Xbox, PlayStation, Nintendo eShop, TikTok, and more. It also supports guest networks, wired LAN connections, and basic access control. The drawbacks are also clear: there is a lack of information on protocols, nodes, countries, logging policy, anonymity, and bandwidth parameters, making privacy and performance hard to evaluate. Pricing is not transparent, so advanced users cannot judge cost-effectiveness based on the available information.
Routuber is better suited to household users in Russia, console gamers, streaming users, and users who want low-effort access to AI and developer tools. Access from mainland China is not mentioned in the main text, and payment methods are also not disclosed, so this is marked as unknown. If you are looking for alternatives in China, you could consider a GL.iNet router paired with your own VPN, Vilfo, ExpressVPN Aircove, or a self-hosted Outline/V2Ray routing setup.
⚠ 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 routuber.com official site.
routuber.com is an Russia Proxies provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Limited (proxy recommended). Click "Visit Official Site" to reach routuber.com directly.