Bilibili (B站) becomes a learning platform, the first choice for international students taking online courses.
Bilibili (Bilibili.com), one of China's largest learning platforms, offers a vast library of high-quality courses covering programming, design, languages, postgraduate entrance exams, and more. From Python beginners to front-end development, from Photoshop tutorials to UI design, from CET-4 and CET-6 (College English Test Band 4 and 6) to postgraduate entrance exam mathematics… it has it all. Many international students and self-improvement enthusiasts choose Bilibili as their first learning platform, with some even jokingly saying, "I come to Bilibili not to watch animations, I come to learn."
The richness of these learning resources is unmatched by other platforms. Domestic users have long been accustomed to learning on Bilibili; some check in daily to track their progress, some exchange insights in the comments section, and some have even achieved career transitions through the courses.

The dilemma of overseas learners: wanting to learn but "unable to access" the information.
However, for international students studying abroad, these learning resources are difficult to fully utilize. One student studying in Europe shared: "I wanted to find a Python course to learn systematically, but the videos took ten minutes to load before I could watch them." "I finally started watching, but it buffered every few minutes, and I couldn't learn much in one night."
What's even more frustrating is the limited learning functionality—course progress isn't automatically saved, requiring you to start from the beginning the next time you open the app; submitting assignments takes forever with a "network error" message; and asking questions in the comments section often goes unanswered. This "learning halfway, then stopping halfway" experience makes it difficult for many overseas learners to persevere.

What's the problem? What's the solution?
The core reason lies in the network architecture. Domestic education platforms primarily deploy their servers within mainland China, requiring overseas users to traverse international bandwidth. During peak evening hours, this channel becomes extremely congested, making latency and packet loss almost unavoidable. Furthermore, the platform's risk control system, upon detecting overseas IP addresses, may restrict certain functions for compliance reasons.
The solution is actually quite straightforward—make the platform think you're accessing the site from within China. Accelerators like QuickFox do exactly that: they create an encrypted tunnel back to China, with all traffic exiting through domestic nodes. This reduces latency and avoids functional limitations caused by abnormal IP addresses.

The learning experience is completely different after acceleration.
In actual use, the difference is quite noticeable. Before acceleration, opening a course page might take more than ten seconds of loading, video playback would buffer frequently, and the learning functions were basically unusable; after acceleration, the page loads almost instantly, video playback remains smooth, course progress is automatically saved, and assignments and interactive functions work normally.
For overseas learners, the value of these tools lies in enabling them to fully utilize high-quality domestic learning resources, rather than being forced to abandon them. Whether it's systematic learning or fragmented improvement, a stable connection is a fundamental guarantee.
Click the link below to download QuickFox. After registering, use the redemption code 【QF51】 to receive a free 12-hour trial membership. For international students looking to fully utilize Bilibili's learning resources, this amount of time is sufficient to test the acceleration effect!