RoxyBrowser is one of the most widely used anti-detect browsers in the world, with over 3 million users. It supports multiple proxy protocols and offers team collaboration features that make it suitable for both individual users and agencies.
I have worked with RoxyBrowser on several projects, and the 3M+ user community means there is always someone who has solved the problem you are facing.
Proxy Configuration
Setting up Snowpad in RoxyBrowser:
- Open RoxyBrowser and click Create Profile
- Enter a profile name and select your platform
- Navigate to Proxy Settings
- Select SOCKS5 as the proxy type
- Enter
gw.snowpad.ioas the host and9999as the port - Input your Snowpad username and password
- Click Test Proxy to verify the connection
- Save the profile
Why SOCKS5 in RoxyBrowser
RoxyBrowser supports HTTP, HTTPS, and SOCKS5. I always recommend SOCKS5 because:
- It handles both TCP and UDP traffic
- No header modification — the proxy does not rewrite your packets
- Better performance for browser-based automation
- Native authentication support
Proxy Strategy
- Rotating proxies for market research, competitor analysis, and data gathering
- Sticky proxies for account management, social media profiles, and e-commerce accounts
Snowpad handles both modes through the same gw.snowpad.io:9999 endpoint.
Team Features
RoxyBrowser's team features make it stand out:
- Shared profile access with role-based permissions
- Cloud sync across team members
- Activity logging and audit trails
- Bulk proxy assignment
For teams managing multiple Snowpad proxies across different projects, RoxyBrowser's bulk operations save significant time.
For a broader understanding of anti-detect browsers, read my guide on anti-detect browser proxy configuration with Multilogin and AdsPower. The types of proxies guide covers the full landscape of proxy options.



