

Both of these are solid choices, offering great security and speed, so no complaints there. If you’re not sure if that’s something you need, it also uses two of the more well-known VPN protocols, WireGuard and OpenVPN. I can’t imagine what a newbie might make of it. This visual assault was a bit too much for me and I’m pretty comfortable with tech.

I can’t escape the feeling that whoever designed this wanted something that looked cool-and, credit where it’s due, it does at first-but kind of forgot that the rule of cool includes a certain modicum of restraint.

The interface is cluttered, containing way too much extraneous information, and is also stuck in a permanent dark mode that gives me awful eye strain after just a few minutes of use. Proton VPN has a lot going for it, but I’m going to kick off with my biggest issue with the service: I really don’t like the interface, or at least the desktop client on Windows. Using Proton VPN: The Interface Could Use Some Work
