Simple VPN dashboard
Bear VPN opens to a minimal dashboard with a large power button, timer, and counter-style status area. The drawer menu exposes geo asset files, promotion, per-app proxy, settings, and privacy policy entries.
This design suits users who want quick access to connection controls without a complicated server list on the first screen. The main button makes the intended action clear, but VPN permission still needs careful user approval before any connection is trusted.
This gives the section a clearer user value by connecting the main feature to a concrete mobile use case, session goal, or replay reason.
Config import and maintenance tools
The add-config sheet supports importing from QR code or clipboard, while the more menu includes filtering config files, service restart, deleting duplicate or invalid configs, exporting non-custom configs, copying configurations, and sorting by test results.
These tools are useful for users who manage proxy or VPN configurations manually. They also mean users should be careful with clipboard content, imported QR codes, and unknown configuration providers.
This gives the section a clearer user value by connecting the main feature to a concrete mobile use case, session goal, or replay reason.
Reward prompts and privacy review
A diamonds dialog asks the user to watch a promotional video for rewards, and the app also shows auto-connection settings. Android settings list notifications, camera, photos and videos, mobile data, storage, and background behavior.
Before connecting, users should review the privacy policy, VPN permission prompt, reward ad behavior, and any imported configuration. Security apps handle network traffic, so trust and configuration quality matter more than convenience.
This gives the section a clearer user value by connecting the main feature to a concrete mobile use case, session goal, or replay reason.