Security · iOS
VPN Proxy OvpnSpider Pro
by ARCNICE PTE. LTD.



VPN Proxy OvpnSpider Pro has been around since 2014 and sits at a lean 11 MB, which is refreshing in a category full of bloated clients. It works by crawling the internet for publicly available OpenVPN profiles, grouping them by country, and letting you connect directly inside the app or export the .ovpn file to another client. That core mechanic is genuinely useful for OpenVPN power users, but the free-server model comes with real caveats worth understanding before you trust it with your traffic.
The OpenVPN Profile Scraper Approach
Rather than maintaining its own server infrastructure, OvpnSpider automatically hunts down free, publicly listed OpenVPN profiles on the internet. You get a country-sorted list and can tap to connect or share the .ovpn file to a dedicated client like OpenVPN Connect. This is a clever workaround for offering a large server pool without hosting costs, but it also means server quality, uptime, and trustworthiness are entirely outside the developer's control.
Where the Model Creates Real Risk
Connecting through randomly scraped public VPN servers is a meaningful security concern. You have no visibility into who operates those servers or what they log. For casual public Wi-Fi situations the app advertises, this is arguably worse than no VPN if the server itself is malicious. The export-to-.ovpn feature partially saves it for advanced users who want profiles for a trusted client, but casual users may not understand that distinction at all.
Who Actually Gets Value Here
Network hobbyists and developers who need quick access to .ovpn profiles for testing across different country endpoints will find the country-grouped list and one-tap export genuinely handy. At 11 MB and free, the barrier to trying it is near zero. The 4.43 store rating from 11,000 reviews across a decade suggests a stable, functional experience, just not one suited to anyone treating this as a primary privacy tool.
Pros
- Very small install size at 11 MB
- Servers organized by country for quick selection
- Ability to export .ovpn profiles to third-party clients is a practical bonus
- Decade-long update history suggests the developer is not abandoning the project
- Free entry point with no mandatory signup friction mentioned
Cons
- Servers are scraped from public sources, so reliability and trustworthiness cannot be verified
- No indication of a logging policy or who operates the underlying servers
- Free VPN servers can disappear or degrade without notice
- In-app purchases are listed but not detailed, so true cost is unclear
- Not a credible privacy solution for users who actually need one