Network

The fastest path into China. By design.

Novixa is built on premium CN2 lines out of Hong Kong and Japan, stitched together with dedicated return-to-China routes on China Mobile and China Unicom — so every request takes the shortest, cleanest path to its destination.

< 40 ms
P50 Mainland → HK / Tokyo
CN2 GIA
Primary China backbone
3 carriers
CMI · CUG · CT direct peering
0
Public-transit hops into China

The public internet was never designed for Mainland China. Congested peering, asymmetric paths, and provincial re-routing mean that most traffic enters the country through paths that were not chosen — they were defaulted into.

Novixa does not accept defaults. We lease CN2 GIA capacity in Hong Kong and Tokyo, peer directly with China Mobile International (CMI) and China Unicom Global (CUG), and carry every packet over dedicated circuits until it reaches a Mainland eyeball network. No shared transit. No surprise hops.

The result is a network where P50 latency from Shanghai, Beijing, and Guangzhou to our HK and Tokyo PoPs sits comfortably under 40 ms — during peak hours, holidays, and the events that normally break the public internet.

Premium lines, end to end.

We don't resell capacity from a dashboard. Each route below is a lit circuit we paid for, monitored continuously, and provisioned with spare headroom for burst.

Hong Kong CN2 GIA
HKG ⇄ Mainland China
China Telecom Next Carrying Network 2 — Global Internet Access

Our primary southbound path. Lowest observed jitter, lowest loss, first priority for real-time traffic.

Tokyo CN2 GT
NRT ⇄ Mainland China
China Telecom Next Carrying Network 2 — Global Transit

Secondary northbound path. Isolated from the HK circuit so a submarine fault on one does not degrade the other.

China Mobile CMI Premium
HKG / NRT ⇄ CN Mobile eyeballs
China Mobile International direct interconnect

Optimized return-path for CMCC subscribers — where most consumer mobile traffic lives.

China Unicom CUII
HKG / NRT ⇄ CN Unicom eyeballs
China Unicom Global premium interconnect

Dedicated CUII circuits. No 4837 commodity transit, no evening congestion.

Every Chinese carrier, spoken natively.

Mainland China is three separate networks glued together. We treat them that way — with a distinct optimization profile for each eyeball carrier.

China Telecom
AS4809 · CN2

CN2 GIA on the southbound path from Hong Kong, CN2 GT from Tokyo. Lowest-latency, lowest-loss carrier for most Mainland traffic.

China Mobile
AS58453 · CMI

Direct interconnect with China Mobile International. Tuned for mobile-first audiences, where last-mile variability dominates end-user experience.

China Unicom
AS4837 · CUII

Premium CUII path — not the commodity AS4837 transit most providers default to. Evening peak loss stays in the low tenths of a percent.

How a request travels.

Every element below is a Novixa-operated asset. Nothing is rented by the gigabyte.

  1. 01
    Eyeball request originates in Mainland China

    A user on China Mobile in Shanghai makes a request. Their ISP hands it to the carrier's nearest international gateway.

  2. 02
    Routed over a dedicated CN2 / CMI circuit

    The packet enters a circuit we lease directly — not shared public transit. Latency, loss, and jitter are bounded by contract, not by the weather.

  3. 03
    Terminated at Novixa HK or Tokyo

    The packet hits our edge in Hong Kong or Tokyo. Cached content is returned immediately; dynamic requests are forwarded over our backbone.

  4. 04
    Origin fetched over private backbone

    If the origin is in the US or Europe, we carry the request over our own long-haul backbone — not the congested public internet.

See the difference a real route makes.

Most providers claim China optimization. Ask them which carrier, which AS, which circuit. We'll send you a traceroute.