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:

  1. Open RoxyBrowser and click Create Profile
  2. Enter a profile name and select your platform
  3. Navigate to Proxy Settings
  4. Select SOCKS5 as the proxy type
  5. Enter gw.snowpad.io as the host and 9999 as the port
  6. Input your Snowpad username and password
  7. Click Test Proxy to verify the connection
  8. 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.