Growtopia proxies for production scraping.
Recommended setup: residential proxies, rotating sessions, based on what we see working in production against Growtopia. Copy the recipe and ship.
Growtopia's anti-bot reality.
A Growtopia proxy routes your scraper through a residential IP, so Growtopia sees an ordinary visitor instead of a server. SimplyNode's recommended setup for Growtopia is residential proxies with rotating sessions, country-matched to your data. It is the same pay-as-you-go pricing as everywhere — no Growtopia surcharge. Sites like Growtopia flag datacenter IP ranges, repeated fingerprints, and aggressive request rates. Residential IPs from real homes clear the IP-reputation checks; the rest is pacing and good session hygiene.
Captcha challenges
"Are you a robot?" pages trigger on suspicious IPs plus network-layer fingerprinting. Residential IPs avoid most of it.
Geo-priced content
Prices and content differ by country; the wrong IP returns the wrong market's data. Country targeting matters.
Aggressive rate limits
Too many requests from one IP is ban-bait; even residential IPs need rotation and cooldowns at scale.
Session-required pages
Carts, checkout, and some pages need session continuity. Rotating IPs break the flow; sticky sessions fix it.
What teams access from Growtopia.
Teams use Growtopia proxies to access store and region data at scale — for price and availability monitoring, catalog research, and competitive tracking. Pair residential proxies with country-matched geo and rotating sessions, and keep request rates human.
Growtopia in a few lines.
Replace the target URL and pin the country to your market. Same endpoint over HTTP/HTTPS/SOCKS5.
# Growtopia scraper — SimplyNode residential import requests, time, random # pin the country your data should come from PROXY = "http://login:country-us@ip.simplynode.io:9003" PROXIES = {"http": PROXY, "https": PROXY} HEADERS = {"User-Agent": "Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 14_2) " "AppleWebKit/605.1.15 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/17.2 Safari/605.1.15"} url = "https://<Growtopia target URL>" # the page you are collecting for attempt in range(5): r = requests.get(url, proxies=PROXIES, headers=HEADERS, timeout=30) if r.status_code in (429, 503): # rate-limit / captcha -> back off time.sleep(2 ** attempt + random.random()); continue break print(r.status_code, len(r.text))
Mistakes that get you blocked on Growtopia.
We see these constantly in customer pipelines. Each fix is a one-line change.
Using datacenter proxies
Datacenter IPs get flagged instantly. Use residential — we don't sell datacenter for this reason.
Wrong country = wrong data
Pin the country (e.g. country-us) so you get the right localized prices/results, not a default.
Rotating mid-pagination
Use a sticky session for a single multi-page walk; switch sessions only between separate items.
Default / blank User-Agent
python-requests and curl UAs are blocked on sight. Send a realistic browser User-Agent.
Same pricing — no Growtopia surcharge.
Growtopia works on the standard per-GB rate (from $2.25/GB at scale), with loyalty discounts on top. No target surcharge.
Standard rate
Growtopia works on the standard per-GB rate (from $2.25/GB at scale), with loyalty discounts on top. No target surcharge.
Growtopia proxies - common questions.
Residential proxies with rotating sessions, country-matched. Growtopia works well on residential IPs at human request rates.
Sites like Growtopia flag datacenter IP ranges, repeated fingerprints, and aggressive request rates. Residential IPs from real homes clear the IP-reputation checks; the rest is pacing and good session hygiene.
Point your client at our gateway over HTTP/HTTPS/SOCKS5, authenticate with username:password or a whitelisted IP, choose residential and rotating sessions. No SDK.
No. Growtopia uses the standard per-GB rate; there is no target surcharge.
Yes — buy 1 GB, run the recommended setup against the target, and check the success rate. Bandwidth never expires.
Run your Growtopia setup on the right IPs.
Buy 1 GB, copy the Growtopia recipe, and ship. Bandwidth never expires.








