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Proxifier Guide -

Proxifier is not a VPN. It doesn’t hide your IP from your ISP at the system level—only the apps you specify. Use it to choose , not to blanket . That’s the power.

Alex, a freelance data analyst, was stuck. He was traveling abroad, and his coffee shop’s Wi-Fi blocked half the tools he needed: his company’s internal dashboard, his SSH client, and even his favorite code repository. A VPN worked, but it slowed everything down—including his video calls. He had a fast, reliable SOCKS5 proxy from a friend’s server, but most of his apps didn’t support proxies natively.

Now go proxy something.

Alex’s browser loaded a “Blocked by CoffeeShopWiFi” page. Proxifier wasn’t magic—it’s a rule engine. By default, it lets everything go Direct .

| If you want to… | Do this in Proxifier | |----------------|----------------------| | Proxy only specific apps | Use Applications: field with .exe names | | Avoid proxying local traffic | Add rules with Target Hosts: 192.168.*.*; 127.0.0.1 → Action: Direct | | Debug what’s going where | Watch the log | | Never proxy a certain domain | Add a rule with that domain → Direct (above the proxy rule) | | Force all traffic through proxy | Keep only one rule: * → Proxy (but not recommended) | proxifier guide

One day, the proxy server went down. His apps just hung. No error, no fallback.

He saved the profile. He opened Chrome. The coffee shop’s block page was gone. His company dashboard loaded instantly. He opened VS Code—the GitHub clone started working. Proxifier is not a VPN

Back home a week later, Alex disabled Proxifier (File → Exit). But he saved his configuration as work-travel.ppx . Now, any time he lands in a restrictive network, he double-clicks that file, and within two seconds: his tools work, his music stays local, and his DNS doesn’t leak.