Why Tegant exists
Most VPNs are built for people who want to watch Netflix from another country. Tegant is built for people who need the internet to work at all. In Russia, China and parts of the Persian Gulf, ordinary VPN traffic is fingerprinted by deep packet inspection and quietly dropped — which is why the app that worked yesterday fails today.
So we run two engines side by side: WireGuard for raw speed on open networks, and the XRay stealth suite — VLESS with Reality, Trojan and XHTTP — that disguises your connection as ordinary web traffic when networks turn hostile. Both are available on iPhone, iPad, Mac and Android, and both are built on open, widely audited protocol standards rather than proprietary black boxes.
Who we are
Venus Cloud Ltd was founded by Hermann in England in 2011 and has stayed deliberately small and self-funded ever since — no venture capital, no growth-at-any-cost targets, and therefore no pressure to monetise your data. The people who answer support@tegant.com are the same people who write the code.
Alongside Tegant, we build CallSky, a pay-as-you-go international calling app that picks up where Skype left off. Two products, one small team, the same principle: tools that respect the person using them.
How we work
No-log means no log
We do not record what you browse, when you connect, or where from. Nothing to sell, nothing to leak, nothing to hand over.
Open protocols, not black boxes
Standard WireGuard and the open-source XRay core — technology you can verify, not a proprietary mystery tunnel.
Honest freemium
The free tier runs on WireGuard and is paid for by ads you choose to watch. Premium funds the 10 Gbps network and the XRay stealth stack. You always know what you are paying with.
Support by the builders
No outsourced ticket queue. Emails are read and answered by the people who ship the app, usually within one working day.
Straight talk about jurisdiction: we are registered in England — not behind a brass plate in a tax haven. Could a government ask us for user data? Any government can ask. Our answer is the same for all of them: we keep no activity logs, so there is nothing to hand over.