Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Based on the scraped content, the skysaver.net page mainly introduces Proxynel Browser, while the terms of service also mention Kiwi VPN. The operator is Timon Software. The product positioning is closer to a mobile privacy browser combined with a VPN service: on the browser side, it emphasizes being lightweight, faster downloads, ad blocking, data savings, and private browsing; on the VPN side, it describes improving online privacy and security through an encrypted tunnel between the device and the server.
There is limited public information on key proxy/VPN metrics. The text does not disclose the proxy type, so it is not possible to determine whether it uses residential, datacenter, or mobile IPs. It also does not state the IP pool size, number of servers, or covered countries/regions. In terms of protocols, it is only described as an “encrypted tunnel,” without specifying WireGuard, OpenVPN, or IKEv2, nor does it mention HTTP or SOCKS5. The number of concurrent devices, bandwidth limits, and throttling policies are also not provided.
What is relatively clear is its anonymity and logging policy. The terms state that it applies a no-log policy to sensitive data and does not monitor, record, or store browsing history, DNS queries during connections, traffic destinations, data, or content. However, it also collects anonymous usage data for service improvement and marketing, while stating that such data cannot identify users or their online activities. This is better than products that do not disclose any logging policy at all, but it still lacks further proof such as third-party audits, data retention periods, or RAM-only servers.
The page does not provide plan pricing, free/paid tier boundaries, refund policy, trial policy, or payment methods, so value for money can only be assessed conservatively. For support channels, the terms provide a support email, but there is no visible live chat, ticket system, response-time commitment, or detailed help documentation.
The advantage is that the mobile browser features are relatively clear, and ad blocking plus data compression can be genuinely useful for cellular network users. The VPN terms also explicitly state that sensitive activity logs are not recorded. The downside is mixed branding, with both Proxynel and Kiwi VPN appearing. Core VPN selection information such as nodes, protocols, speed, concurrency, and pricing is missing, making it difficult for professional users to judge reliability.
It is better suited to ordinary users who only need basic private browsing on mobile, fewer ads, data savings, and encrypted protection on public networks. It is not suitable for users who require fixed regional nodes, protocol control, large-scale proxies, automated scraping, or enterprise-grade compliance. The text does not describe access from China, so it is not possible to determine whether the official website or service can be accessed directly, or whether domestic Chinese payment methods are supported. If using it in China, it is recommended to first verify app download availability, connection stability, and payment feasibility before considering it as an alternative to more established 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 skysaver.net official site.
skysaver.net is an Unknown Proxies 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 skysaver.net directly.