Deployment has been streamlined for the "China New" version. You no longer need a dedicated VPS in Hong Kong or Singapore.

Step 1: Acquire the Client The official client is available via GitHub (mirror on Gitee for Chinese users). Look for release tag v2.0.0-cn-stable.

Step 2: Configuration The new configuration uses a YAML file. A basic "China" setup looks like this:

proxy:
  type: konoha-new
  region: cn-east
  obfuscation: full
  fallback: websocket-tls
  dns: 119.29.29.29 (Tencent DNS)

Step 3: Handshake Unlike older proxies, the new version uses a QR code handshake for mobile devices. Scan the ephemeral key generated on your server to authenticate.

Step 4: Verification To verify you are using the "new" engine, run: konoha-cli --status Look for Version: 2.0-cn | Signature: Camellia-256

Even with the "new" version, users face occasional hurdles. Here are fixes:

  • Issue: High latency on China Mobile networks.
  • Issue: Blocked by corporate firewall.
  • The new servers utilize advanced obfuscation technology. This means the traffic looks like standard HTTPS web browsing, making it much harder for network filters to identify and block the proxy IP.

    If you are searching for "Konoha proxy China new," exercise extreme caution:

    Summary: The text related to your query refers to alternative URLs (proxies) for an unofficial manga aggregator site hosting Naruto/Boruto content, which users are seeking because previous domains have been blocked or taken down.


    Title: Konoha Proxy, China, and the New Era of Residential IP Networks: What You Need to Know

    Published: April 23, 2026 | 5 min read

    If you’ve been following the underground (and above-ground) conversations about web scraping, ad verification, or bypassing geo-restrictions, you’ve likely seen a spike in mentions of three things: Konoha Proxy, China’s new cybersecurity posture, and the rising demand for fresh, clean residential IPs.

    But what’s actually new? And why is Konoha suddenly at the center of the conversation?

    For gamers and VoIP users, packet loss was a nightmare. The new proxy rewrites UDP packets as QUIC (Quick UDP Internet Connections), which is still treated as a priority protocol by Chinese ISPs.