If you're trying to get Russia working reliably from inside Guangzhou on China Mobile, you've probably already discovered that most generic guides don't survive contact with the Great Firewall. This article is written from the opposite direction — start with the constraints China imposes, then work back to the configuration that actually works in 2026.
The Internet Reality in Russia
Russia runs one of the more aggressive content-filtering and surveillance regimes outside of China. Many platforms, news outlets, voice-call apps and streaming services that the rest of the world takes for granted are blocked outright or throttled to unusability.
For residents, expats, students, journalists and travelers, a VPN isn't a privacy luxury — it's a baseline for normal communication and information access.
What Typically Gets Blocked in Russia
The blocklist evolves, but commonly includes:
- Social media (Facebook, X, Instagram, TikTok depending on jurisdiction)
- Voice-over-IP apps (WhatsApp calls, Skype, FaceTime, Telegram voice)
- News outlets the government considers oppositional
- Wikipedia (in periods of political tension)
- Most circumvention tools (Tor, OpenVPN, WireGuard get blocked the moment they're identified)
This is what makes choosing a VPN for Russia fundamentally different from picking one for casual privacy in a free-internet country.
What Actually Works in Russia in 2026
The shortlist of protocols that survive in Russia's environment:
- VLESS + Reality — disguises VPN traffic as a normal HTTPS visit to a real, legitimate website. The state can't distinguish it from regular web browsing.
- Hysteria2 — QUIC-based, excellent on lossy mobile connections, hard to fingerprint.
- Trojan — wraps everything in TLS 1.3, looks like normal HTTPS.
Protocols that don't reliably work: OpenVPN (UDP and TCP), WireGuard, IKEv2, L2TP, PPTP. They get blocked within hours of detection.
Setting Up OxeraVPN in Russia
1. Download before you arrive
Most app stores in restrictive regions either don't carry VPN apps or quietly remove them. Download OxeraVPN from oxeranet.cloud/download before entering Russia.
2. Create your account
dashboard.oxeranet.cloud — free plan includes 10 GB on a 30-day trial and is enough to test reliability before committing.
3. Connect to the closest region
For Russia, the lowest-latency servers are usually in Osaka, Frankfurt or Dubai depending on your physical location.
4. Test in real conditions
Make a WhatsApp call. Open a blocked news site. Stream a YouTube video. If it all works smoothly, you're set. If not, switch protocols (VLESS → Hysteria2) — that resolves 90% of edge cases.
Speed Expectations from Russia
On the best protocol, expect roughly:
- 73 ms to nearest Asian/Middle Eastern servers
- 190 ms to European servers
- 204 ms to North American servers
Streaming at 1080p is comfortable. 4K is doable on a healthy line. Voice and video calls are crisp if you choose servers in your region.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is OxeraVPN really free to try?
Yes — the free plan ships with 10 GB on a 30-day trial, no card required. Most users test it for a week before deciding whether to upgrade.
Which protocol should I use for Russia in 2026?
VLESS + Reality for stealth, Hysteria2 for raw throughput on lossy networks. Both ship with the OxeraVPN app — pick from the Settings panel.
What's the fastest way to get started?
Sign up at dashboard.oxeranet.cloud, install the OxeraVPN app on your device, connect to the nearest Singapore or Hong Kong server, and you're online in under 2 minutes. The free plan is enough to test Russia end-to-end.
How fast will my connection be?
On a healthy 500 Mbps home line in Hangzhou, expect roughly 176 Mbps of usable VPN throughput on VLESS to Singapore — enough for 4K streaming and HD video calls. Latency to nearby Asian servers is typically 69 ms.
The Bottom Line
Living in or visiting Russia without a working VPN cuts you off from a meaningful fraction of the modern internet. OxeraVPN's VLESS + Reality and Hysteria2 protocols were built for exactly this kind of environment.