R

Rampage Proxies

4/ 5· 1 review
Est. 2018
Verified Provider

Multi-vendor proxy mediation layer that resold residential, mobile, datacenter and ISP IPs from seven networks under one dashboard — now folded into SOAX.

Visit Website
www.rampageproxies.com

Pool Size

400M+ (aggregated across 7 upstream networks)

Countries

0

Uptime

99.9%

Response

0.5s

About Rampage Proxies

Rampage Proxies was a proxy reseller and mediation platform founded in 2018 that took a different angle from most providers in the market: instead of running its own peer network end-to-end, it aggregated traffic across seven upstream networks — Bright Data, Oxylabs ("O Proxy"), Smartproxy ("S Proxy"), PacketStream, IPRoyal, and a couple of mobile-focused suppliers — and sold access at wholesale-style pricing through a single dashboard. The pitch was simple: get the IP quality of tier-one networks without paying tier-one sticker prices, and use Rampage's smart routing layer to failover between upstreams when one provider degraded on a given target site.

On paper the combined pool was advertised at 400M+ IPs across residential, mobile, datacenter and ISP categories, with country and city-level targeting inherited from whichever upstream you routed through. In practice that meant Rampage's network coverage was effectively the union of its suppliers — strong everywhere Bright Data and Oxylabs were strong (US, UK, DE, broad EU, major APAC metros), thinner in places those networks were thin. Sticky sessions, HTTPS and SOCKS5 support, and standard rotating gateways were all available, again inherited from whichever upstream was selected per request.

Pricing was the headline feature. Rampage's own-brand residential plan ran $4.60/GB on retail with a $1/GB "Core" tier aimed at low-security targets, and mobile traffic was listed around $7.80/GB. The real discount lived in the $25/month Pro membership, which unlocked up to ~30% off third-party providers — Oxylabs residential at roughly $3/GB, BrightData at ~$3.50/GB, IPRoyal at ~$2/GB, Smartproxy at ~$3/GB — all billed inside the Rampage panel. You could top up from 1GB at a time with no monthly commitment outside the membership, which made it popular with solo scrapers and small agencies who wanted Bright Data-quality IPs without the Bright Data contract.

What Rampage Proxies was genuinely known for was the mediation layer itself: a routing dashboard that let you compare upstreams on the same target, switch providers per project, and avoid being locked into a single vendor's quirks. For developers running price aggregators, SEO rank tracking, or sneaker copping where one site behaves well on Oxylabs and another on IPRoyal, that flexibility was hard to replicate elsewhere. Customer reviews on Trustpilot were broadly positive on speed and dashboard UX, with the occasional complaint about API documentation gaps and slower support replies during peak windows.

Where Rampage Proxies sat on the price/quality curve was firmly "value reseller for power users." It was not the play for an enterprise that wanted SLAs, dedicated account managers, or compliance paperwork — for that, going direct to Bright Data, Oxylabs, Decodo or SOAX always made more sense. It was the play for a scraping freelancer, a growth team running 5–50 GB/month, or a sneaker reseller who wanted to A/B test pools without signing five separate contracts. Compared to Webshare (which is pure-play self-network at very low prices) Rampage offered better IP quality on hard targets; compared to BrightData direct, it offered no-commitment billing and a single-pane-of-glass UI.

The critical buyer note in 2026: SOAX acquired Rampage Proxies in 2025, and existing customers were migrated to SOAX between June 10 and July 10, 2025. The rampageproxies.com brand is no longer being sold as a standalone product — traffic redirects to SOAX, and the mediation tech has been folded into SOAX's own infrastructure. If you are evaluating Rampage today, you are effectively evaluating SOAX. Anyone landing here looking for the old multi-vendor reseller experience should treat that product as discontinued and review SOAX's residential, mobile, ISP, and Web Unblocker offerings instead.

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IPs
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Volume DiscountsView full pricing

1+ IPs
$1.35/IP
10+ IPsCurrent Plan
$1.35/IP
50+ IPs
$1.35/IP
Estimated Cost
$33.75/mo
1.35 per IP
Selected PlanDatacenter
Volume25 IPs

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Features & Capabilities

General

API Access
Dashboard
Free Trial

Performance

Unlimited Bandwidth
Concurrent Sessions

Targeting

Country Targeting
City Targeting
State Targeting
ASN Targeting

Protocols

HTTP(S)
SOCKS5

Authentication

User/Pass
IP Whitelist

Support

24/7 Support
Live Chat
Email Support

Pros

  • Aggregated 400M+ IPs across seven upstream networks including Bright Data, Oxylabs, Smartproxy and IPRoyal under one dashboard
  • Pay-as-you-go billing from 1GB with no monthly commitment outside the optional $25 Pro membership
  • Smart proxy mediation layer let you failover between vendors per target site without separate contracts
  • Wholesale-style pricing — Rampage Residential at $4.60/GB and third-party residential as low as $2/GB via Pro membership
  • Supported residential, mobile, ISP and datacenter pools with HTTPS, SOCKS5 and sticky sessions inherited from upstream

Cons

  • Rampage Proxies was acquired by SOAX in 2025 — the standalone brand is discontinued and customers have been migrated
  • IP quality and country coverage depended entirely on the upstream provider you routed through, not on Rampage itself
  • API documentation and support response times were inconsistent, especially for complex integrations
  • No enterprise SLAs, dedicated account managers or compliance paperwork — built for solo scrapers, not regulated buyers

Frequently Asked Questions

Everything you need to know about Rampage Proxies

No — Rampage Proxies as a standalone product is effectively shut down. SOAX acquired Rampage Proxies in May 2025 and migrated all existing customers onto the SOAX platform between June 10 and July 10, 2025. After that window, the rampageproxies.com service was redirected to SOAX, and the Rampage mediation technology was folded into SOAX's own proxy infrastructure and scraper APIs. If you sign up today, you are buying SOAX. Anyone specifically looking for the old multi-vendor reseller dashboard should know that experience no longer exists in the same form — SOAX runs its own residential, mobile, ISP and datacenter pools, plus a Web Unblocker and 50+ domain-specific scraper APIs, and that is what you will be using going forward.

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User Reviews

Community Ratings

Based on 1 user review

Overall Score
4.0
out of 5.0
Uptime4.0
AI Ready3.5
Response4.5
Pool Size4.0
IP Locations3.5
Integrations3.5
C

Connor O'Malley

8 months ago

Rampage datacenter proxies are quick and the pricing per IP is hard to beat for bulk scraping. Locations are limited mostly to US and EU though.

Verified Provider
4.0(1)
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Best Starting Price
$1.35/per ip
across 4 proxy types
Pricing by Type
Datacenter
$1.35
per ip
Mobile
$7.6
per gb
ISP
$1.7
per ip
Residential
400M+ (aggregated across 7 upstream networks) IPs
$1
per gb
Visit Rampage Proxies

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99.9%uptime
195countries

Best For

Quick Info

Founded2018
Total IPs400M+ (aggregated across 7 upstream networks)
Countries0
Uptime99.9%