dtienloi
Newbie
- Joined
- Mar 14, 2025
- Posts
- 2
Most well known commercial VPNs such NordVPN or ExpressVPN aren't designed for circumventing GFW. They are designed to hide your traffic from your Internet Service Provider, not from a nation state. If they claim to work in China they are usually being dishonest.The annoying thing, I’d paid for a one off Nord VPN because reviews stated that it worked in China - it doesn’t.
I read that Mullvad VPN seem to have made some effort for China and Russia: Using Mullvad VPN in restrictive locations But I have not tested it myself.
Geph Geph is another one that specifically targets China and Iran. SkyfireVPN is another SkyFire VPN – Keep Your Internet Safe and Secure. Again, not tested myself, but some friends in china have used them.
The most common approach among Chinese users who want to bypass the GFW involves a mix of self-hosted servers and black-market VPNs. I wouldn’t recommend these for a visitor though.
Challenges of networking in China aren’t limited to the Great Firewall (which actively blocks traffic). There’s also the issue of congested international exit bandwidth and poor interconnectivity between the three state-owned Internet Service Providers. Welcome to GFW.Report and GreatFire.org - We use AI to Monitor Censorship and Expand Free Speech are full of the juicy details for those interested.
The QR code, instead of the straightforward username/password approach, is probably due to police regulations requiring Wi-Fi providers to "know their customer." They ask for a Chinese phone number because those are linked to ID numbers. Some airport Wi-Fi networks will ask you to scan your passport in exchange for access.from the QR code seemed to want a Chinese carrier only so the phone couldn’t connect.

All being said, data roaming is really the only "good" solution. The price you pay actually does solve a whole big bucket of problems. Or just touch grass and forget about internet for a while.