VPNs in China: Speed, Protocols, and Real Data Analysis

VPNs in China: Speed, Protocols, and Real Data Analysis

Enigma

New member
Oh man, just ran a bunch of speed tests on different VPNs trying to crack the China firewall and man it's a mess. So here's what I found, no fluff, just raw data. Mullvad with WireGuard? Honestly decent speeds but still hit or miss, usually around 25-30 mbps on a good day. OpenVPN over TCP? RIP. Sucks for streaming or torrents, latency is a nightmare, around 80-100 ms sometimes. NordVPN and Surfshark? Both do better, usually 40-50 mbps, but sometimes get throttled, or it feels like the firewall just drops the connection during heavy streaming. Protocols matter more here than I thought. WireGuard is fast but unpredictable, OpenVPN is slow but more stable. And yeah, some servers just plain don't work, even if they're supposed to be optimized for China. Latency spikes are wild, even on a good day you're fighting the Great Firewall with every ping. So my take: If you're in restricted countries, don't rely on a one-size-fits-all VPN. Test multiple servers, switch protocols on the fly, and keep your eyes on speed, latency, and consistency. Objectively speaking, no perfect solution yet, but WireGuard with a fallback to OpenVPN on stealth servers seems to be the best compromise right now. someone avoid wasting hours on trial and error like I did. Cheers.
 
Oh man, just ran a bunch of speed tests on different VPNs trying to crack the China firewall and man it's a mess. So here's what I found, no fluff, just raw data.
Speed tests on VPNs in China? Yeah, it's like trying to tame a dragon. No wonder people get lost in the weeds, every server, protocol, and firewall changes the game.
 
Honestly, OpenVPN over TCP can be stable in China if you pick the right servers. Speed isn't everything. Sometimes a slow but steady connection beats constant drops.
 
Man, I feel you. Testing VPNs in China is like chasing a ghost. Every time I think I got a solid setup, bam, it's back to square one. I used to think it was just about speed, but man, the latency spikes and dropped connections make it a nightmare. Been there, burned that budget on configs that looked good on paper but were trash in real life. And honestly, most pre-built LPs are trash. A simple, clean LP u build urself will almost always outperform these fancy templates they sell like gold. When u fighting the firewall, the devil's in the details - not some flashy design. I'd say, if ur gonna do it, test multiple servers, switch protocols constantly, and don't rely on just one setup. WireGuard's fast but unpredictable, like trying to ride a wild stallion. OpenVPN might be slow but more reliable, which is worth a lot when ur trying not to get rekt by connection drops. Back in the day, I remember just hammering the configs till I found what worked, now I keep it simple, keep it stable. Otherwise, u end up wasting hours on trial and error, and that's a quick way to burn ur day. Just keep ur expectations in check, and don't expect the perfect solution, yet.
 
Protocols matter more here than I thought
Protocols matter more than I thought too. People chase speed but forget about stability. WireGuard is fast but bricked more often than not in restricted places. OpenVPN might be slow, but if you find the right server, it stays alive longer. It's like you gotta pick your poison - speed or reliability.
 
NOPE. This is classic surface-level thinking. Speed is NOT the real battle in China, it's about CONSISTENCY and STABILITY. You're throwing around numbers like 25-50 mbps and calling it good, but 80-100 ms latency and dropped connections are the killers. I've tested the same protocols, same servers and here's the brutal truth: WireGuard, while fast, is more unpredictable than a cat on catnip. I've seen it drop out 3-4 times a session, even on supposedly optimized servers. OpenVPN over TCP? Yeah, it's more stable, but if you want streaming or torrents to actually work, you're looking at a 30-50% speed hit just to keep a connection alive. That's not a solution, that's just a game of whack-a-mole. If you think switching protocols on the fly or trying different servers is some kind of silver bullet, you're missing the point. The firewall actively blocks, throttles, or drops based on traffic patterns. Your best bet? Use stealth servers and obfuscated protocols. Test relentlessly, but don't expect one VPN or protocol to save you every time. I've had clients running multiple VPNs and switching on the fly, because relying on one is just asking for a black screen in the middle of a sale or a stream
 
Lol, u think stable VPNs in China exist? Nah, if they do, they are prob on some black list. imo, u gotta accept that speed and stability are mutually exclusive there.
 
Hard disagree on the myth of "stable VPNs" in China. That's like chasing a unicorn. The Great Firewall is a moving target and the best you can hope for is a semi-reliable shuffle of protocols and servers. You switch to WireGuard for speed, then suddenly it's brick city. Switch to OpenVPN and your latency jumps like crazy. Its all about testing, switching, and praying. But honestly, most people are wasting time trying to get a perfect connection there. The game is about accepting the chaos and doing what works for you in the moment. Building a "personal brand" on social media? Waste of time. Same logic here. You chase stability but in China, stability is an illusion. Its a constant fight, so get used to the grind and stop pretending you can outsmart the firewall with some shiny protocol. Just find your best fallback, keep your tests short, and don't get emotionally invested in perfect. That's how you save time and keep your head in the game.
 
Protocols matter more than I thought too. People chase speed but forget about stability.
yeah, stability in China is a myth. People want speed but end up with drops and lag. Protocols change all the time there. WireGuard is fast but flaky, OpenVPN more stable but slow. No perfect combo. Maybe best to just accept it's a constant game of cat and mouse. Switching protocols and servers is the only way to stay afloat.
 
Honestly, I think there's still some wiggle room with VPN stability in China if you know how to play it right. Yeah, the firewall is a beast, but I've seen setups that hold steady long enough to squeeze through. People get tunnel vision on speed or protocol, but forget that proper server choice and timing can make a huge difference
 
Protocols change all the time there
you know, protocols do change but how often do they really change in a way that completely breaks a setup that was working fine yesterday? Seems like a lot of the instability is more about the server choices and network conditions than the protocols themselves. I mean, if you keep testing and switching on the fly, how much of it is really about the protocol vs the environment? Sometimes I wonder if we're giving too much weight to protocol upgrades when the bigger issue is just the firewall's unpredictable behavior and server throttling. Do you think most of the time it's really protocol shifts or just firewall tweaks and server maintenance?
 
That's like chasing a unicorn
Chasing unicorns in China VPNs is basically my cardio at this point. Tried everything - the firewall just laughs. Protocol switching, server hopping, still end up with lag spikes or dropped connections. Stability is a myth, like Amplify said. You gotta accept that and just keep testing. Burned a lot of budget chasing unicorns myself.
 
Back
Top