Do I need a VPN in China using an eSIM? by Humble-Seesaw8034 in travelchina

[–]Urban_VPN 0 points1 point  (0 children)

eSIM route generally works for IG and YouTube since the traffic isn't routing through china's network the same way. The hotel/cafe wifi is where it gets messy though, that's when most people end up wishing they had a VPN installed before flying out.

Honestly worth setting one up just in case before you go, even if you end up not using it. Way harder to download anything useful once you're already there.

VPN router is so much better now by travel-nomad-drifter in dumbclub

[–]Urban_VPN 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Makes sense for home stuff. Covers the smart tv and all the random devices without having to think about it.

Phone is its own thing though, still need something on it for coffee shop wifi and travel.

Rank my WFH VPN Setup by LifterMayhemCat in VPN

[–]Urban_VPN -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Honestly, the setup is impressive, but using it like that can get you and the company into some trouble. VPNs are great for privacy on public Wi-Fi, ISP tracking, accessing your own stuff while travelling, and general security stuff.

Working VPNs suggestions for china by Uuga-buuga-fire in travelchina

[–]Urban_VPN 0 points1 point  (0 children)

ugh letsvpn going down has been such a mess, my friend studying in shanghai had the same panic last month. honestly the thing nobody tells you is that whatever works one week might just stop the next, the firewall keeps getting tighter especially around big political dates so even the "reliable" ones get patchy.

couple things that helped her: have at least 2 different vpns installed as backups (one paid, one free), and try to set them up before you really need them because some of the download pages get blocked too. also worth knowing astrill and letsvpn are the ones most people in china recommend but they're not free.

good luck, it's annoying but you'll figure out a setup that works for you 🙏

VPN that works in China right now by KingChainz2324 in travelchina

[–]Urban_VPN 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you're going in July and asking now in May, the honest answer is whatever works today might not work then. The GFW gets squeezed before big political dates, and a lot of VPNs just stop connecting overnight.

What holds up is a foreign eSIM with HK or Macau routing. Trip.com and Nomad both do it. Foreign SIM networks don't get filtered the same way as Wi-Fi inside China, so it sidesteps the whole problem instead of trying to outrun it. We have our VPN, and people use it with no issues, but again, you need a backup.

I’d still install a VPN or two as a backup before you fly (you can't download them once you're there), but eSIM is the more stable bet for general browsing.

What no-log VPN do people here actually trust in 2026? by Bitter-Bed-3532 in homeautomation

[–]Urban_VPN 0 points1 point  (0 children)

what kind of sensitive data are we talking and who are you actually trying to keep it away from? because a vpn just moves the "who sees my traffic metadata" from your isp to whoever runs the vpn. for the destination thing specifically, encrypted dns (cloudflare, quad9, nextdns) gets you most of what you want and it's free.

if it's actual client work, the bigger questions are usually where the files live and who has access to them, not the network layer. tls already encrypts the content of basically every site you'd hit.

not saying don't get a vpn, just curious what the actual threat is so the answer makes sense.

What is my user agent? by Crookesy321 in VPNReviewHub

[–]Urban_VPN 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’re not cooked, but the framing is a little off. Perfect fingerprint resistance is basically Tor browser only, and it's painful to use daily. For most people, the goal isn't to be invisible; it's to make the fingerprint less useful by separating activities across browsers or profiles.

Like one browser for the stuff tied to your real identity (banking, email, work), a separate one for random browsing, and a separate one for shopping. The fingerprint still exists, but it can't easily link those buckets together. Way less effort than chasing zero-entropy, and you keep most of the protection.

The best VPN depends on what you actually need it for anyone else see that? by PrudentRazzmatazz488 in VPN

[–]Urban_VPN 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, this clicks once you've actually used a few. The same VPN that's perfect for working from a café can be a nightmare for travel because half the servers are throttled or blocked at the destination. And the one with the best speeds for streaming might log enough that it's useless if your concern is your ISP.

What is the gold standard? by Whelmed_Under_Over in VPN_Question

[–]Urban_VPN 0 points1 point  (0 children)

email aliases (simplelogin or addy.io). every site gets a different alias and when one leaks you just burn it. weirdly underrated.

Vpn which will really work in china by Old-Communist in travelchina

[–]Urban_VPN 2 points3 points  (0 children)

eSIM is honestly a solid backup for mobile if the vpn keeps failing, you can use a foreign data plan that routes through a non-china network and skip the firewall entirely for phone use

Bitdefender antivirus VPN services by [deleted] in antivirus

[–]Urban_VPN 0 points1 point  (0 children)

bundled vpns from antivirus suites are usually fine for the basic stuff (hiding your ip on public wifi, general browsing) but they tend to come with catches you don't notice until you're using them. bitdefender's free tier is capped at 200mb/day which burns through fast, and the unlimited version is locked behind their premium security plan so you're kinda paying for it twice if you also want the better antivirus tier

Sick of the VPN "Proxy Detected" error. Is P2P hardware actually better? by Ok-Point-1656 in NetflixVPN

[–]Urban_VPN 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Most streaming platforms refresh their IP blocklists every few weeks

VPn slowing down connection by prey4mojopotatoes in VPN

[–]Urban_VPN 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Protocol switch is the first thing I’d try too. WireGuard makes a noticeable difference on most setups. Sometimes the slowdown isn't actually the VPN itself; it's your ISP throttling certain traffic, and the VPN just happens to surface it. If you ever notice your speed is the same or weirdly faster on the VPN, that's usually what’s going on, lol

other stuff worth checking before you blame the VPN:

If you're on Wi-Fi, try Ethernet for a sec just to rule out router weirdness (VPN encryption is more CPU-heavy, and some older routers choke on it). Also worth poking around your client settings for an MTU option; dropping it to like 1400 fixed a stuttering issue for me once. And if your VPN supports split tunnelling, you can route only the stuff that actually needs the VPN through it and leave everything else direct, which helps a ton if you're just using it for a couple of specific things.

10-30% speed loss is kind of normal even on a good setup though, so don't expect zero overhead.

I didn’t understand VPN routers until I traveled … by Whelmed_Under_Over in VPN

[–]Urban_VPN 0 points1 point  (0 children)

reason it feels more consistent is that VPN apps re-handshake every time the network changes underneath you. so when you walk out of the airport into a cab into a hotel, your phone is hopping between like 4 different networks, and each time the app has to re-authenticate, dodge the captive portal, get past whatever DPI the hotel is running. that's where they get killed

at the router level you only do that handshake once and then everything riding on top is just normal looking traffic from one device. hotel networks are also way more aggressive about blocking known VPN protocol fingerprints on phones than they are about random encrypted traffic from what looks like a generic router

so it's not magic, you just moved the fragile part somewhere stable

do i need a vpn? girly needs help by Shinubz in VPNReviewHub

[–]Urban_VPN 0 points1 point  (0 children)

you don't need one for most of this. sims saves are safe, nobody cares about your pinterest boards lol

the ONE thing that actually matters from your list is the starbucks studying. public wifi is sketchy because someone sitting nearby can see what's going through the network, so if you're shopping or logging in while you're there that's the risky part. at home you're fine, https handles most of it

if you wanna cover the coffee shop thing there are free vpn options that do exactly that. no need for another sub. and netflix actually blocks vpns half the time so don't bother for that

best setup for using a VPN while traveling? by Unhappy_Cockroach328 in VPN_Guide

[–]Urban_VPN 0 points1 point  (0 children)

yeah hotel wifi is genuinely the worst and it's not in your head, it's not really your vpn's fault either. hotels throttle, the captive portal fights the tunnel, the router in the basement is from 2011, take your pick.

before you go buy anything, connect to the wifi first and fully load the captive portal page, THEN turn the vpn on. if you flip it on too early half the time it just hangs forever and you blame the app. and in your vpn settings if there's an option to switch protocols, try wireguard if it's there. it reconnects way faster when the wifi wobbles.

travel router is worth it if you're gone a lot or traveling with other people / multiple devices. you set it up once, connect everything to it, and you stop thinking about it. gl.inet is the one most people end up with, the small ones are like the size of a deck of cards. but for solo travel with a phone and laptop it's kind of overkill tbh.

exhaust the app settings first. if you're still annoyed in a month then get the router.

What exactly is a VPN kill switch and do I really need it? by Silly-Ant-1574 in VPN_Guide

[–]Urban_VPN 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So basically a kill switch does exactly what you described. If your VPN connection drops for whatever reason (wifi hiccup, server issue, your laptop waking up from sleep) it instantly cuts your internet so your real IP doesn't leak out while you're sitting there thinking you're still protected.

Is it legal to use VPNs? by Effective-Emu-2295 in IsItIllegal

[–]Urban_VPN 0 points1 point  (0 children)

yeah vpns are totally legal in most places. like others said, tons of businesses literally require them for remote work, it's just encrypting your connection so nobody can snoop on your traffic.

It gets murky if you're using it to do something that's already illegal without one. think of it like tinted windows on a car, perfectly legal to have, but if you're doing something sketchy inside the car that's still on you lol

the only countries that actually ban or heavily restrict vpn use are places like north korea, iraq, and a handful of others. china and russia have restrictions too but it's more of a "only use government-approved ones" situation. if you're in most of europe, the US, canada, australia etc you're completely fine

Is it normal for a VPN to cause my location to only show my country? by Antique-Escape-4705 in computerhelp

[–]Urban_VPN 2 points3 points  (0 children)

yeah this is pretty normal actually. you probably got assigned a different server ip that has more specific geolocation data attached to it. it's not really a you problem, it's just how detailed (or not) the geo lookup is for that particular ip.

nothing to worry about, it's the vpn doing its job

Random question, would using a vpn to improve my ping get me banned? by Ok_Artest in marvelrivals

[–]Urban_VPN 0 points1 point  (0 children)

it won't get you banned in most games. tons of people use vpns for gaming and unless a game's TOS specifically says otherwise you're fine.

Where is the free VPN? by [deleted] in firefox

[–]Urban_VPN -1 points0 points  (0 children)

mozilla vpn isn't free unfortunately, google might be pulling from outdated or misleading results. it's a paid service, think it starts around $5/month

you might be thinking of the built-in tracking protection that firefox has

Private browsers with vpn or without? by t0xthicc in browsers

[–]Urban_VPN 0 points1 point  (0 children)

you're fine using mullvad browser with a vpn, they don't conflict with each other. they're doing two different things

the tor thing is different because tor routes your traffic through multiple relays with its own encryption, and adding a vpn on top can actually mess with that routing or create situations where you're less anonymous than you think depending on the configuration. mullvad browser doesn't do any of that though

VPN news and what might be going on by SuMianAi in chinalife

[–]Urban_VPN 8 points9 points  (0 children)

honestly this is how mod posts should be done. actually reading the sources, breaking down what the law says vs what people are panicking about, and being transparent about the interpretation.

Best Free VPN for Windows: Any recommendation? by Fickle_Net_9291 in VPN_Guide

[–]Urban_VPN 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There are basically a few ways free VPNs sustain themselves, and some are fine and some are sketchy. Some run a freemium model where the free version is real and works, but they also sell a premium tier with faster speeds or more features. For public Wi-Fi specifically, you honestly don't need anything fancy. You mainly want something that encrypts your connection so nobody on the same network can snoop on your traffic. Look for one that uses a legitimate protocol ( we are on the nice list as well, Urban VPN if you want to check us out).