Supreme Traffic Bot, developed by Marton Urban, bills itself as the ultimate traffic generator software. That’s a pretty high bar, and it begs the question: is it all it claims to be, or is it just another low-quality piece of software tapping into worthless traffic? In 2026, with ad fraud detection more sophisticated than ever, that question matters more than it used to.
- Supreme Traffic Bot costs around $68 as a one-time payment, including lifetime updates, but requires additional spending on proxies and captcha services.
- The software supports up to 200 concurrent threads and customizable delays, helping traffic appear more legitimate to ad platforms.
- A strict no-refund policy activates almost immediately after purchase, leaving buyers little opportunity to test before committing.
- STB is best suited for intermediate to advanced users; beginners should expect a notable learning curve before seeing results.
- The bot generates artificial traffic, not real visitors, and using it on monetized sites risks account termination on platforms like Google AdSense.
A Features List

To start, let’s take a look at what Supreme Traffic Bot (version 1.2) actually includes.
Their first advertised feature is generating real visits in real time. You can watch those visits arrive through a built-in browser. STB claims to have a higher chance of a legitimate visit count compared to other bots. It runs on Windows, so compatibility for most users isn’t an issue.
STB has delays you can set. These delays effectively increase the “time spent on site” metric, which makes a view more likely to be counted. An immediate bounce is a sure sign of a bot, and such views are often discarded by advertisers. Delays are also useful in boosting video views, because an immediate bounce doesn’t load enough of the video to count. With modern ad platforms running increasingly aggressive bot detection in 2026, this feature is more relevant than ever.
Multi-threaded operation is a given for any modern traffic bot, and Supreme Traffic Bot is no different. It supports up to 200 concurrent threads - essentially simulating 200 browsers loading your site simultaneously or in a staggered pattern. This makes the traffic look more like a genuine surge of users rather than a sequential refresh loop. The bot allows you to push hits through a variety of simulated browsers, including various versions of Chrome and Firefox.
STB has a built-in proxy checker. When you upload a proxy list, it checks each proxy for validity before using it to generate a view. It also tests proxies for efficiency based on its own internal mechanism, to make sure a proxy isn’t being over-used. This is most important for public proxy lists, though it can be useful to weed out bad apples in private lists as well.
Finally, Supreme Traffic Bot has a built-in system for automating various tasks, complete with a basic GUI programming interface. You don’t need to know code to create these scripts; you essentially click “record,” perform the actions, and the bot monitors and repeats them later. You can flag certain actions to be dynamically executed, such as using a list to generate accounts or to handle captchas and other bot challenges. If you’re comfortable writing scripts manually, that option exists too.
The Cost of Ownership

The price for Supreme Traffic Bot has remained fairly consistent. It’s generally $68, sometimes $65 or lower depending on sales or affiliate promotions. It’s worth shopping around - deals do appear from time to time.
Supreme Traffic Bot uses a one-time payment model, not a subscription. You pay once and receive lifetime access to updates and support. When you purchase, you’re sent a link to the member’s area where you can download the latest version, along with a license key delivered to your email.
One significant drawback: if you’re not satisfied, you’re largely out of luck. Their official return policy states that once the license key is sent out, the sale is final. Since this happens almost immediately after payment, you have no real window to test the software before that point. The only exception is if the software outright doesn’t work - in that case, you must contact support within 7 days of purchase, and support must fail to resolve the issue before a refund is considered.
In 2026, a no-refund policy on software like this is a genuine concern. If you’re unsure whether buying traffic can actually turn into real sales for your site, it’s worth doing that research before committing. Tread carefully.
Our Review

Let’s get this out of the way first: Supreme Traffic Bot is not a bad piece of software. It does what it advertises reasonably well. The one-time payment model is a plus - you’re not locked into ongoing fees for the core product - and lifetime updates mean you’re not buying something that will be abandoned in six months.
That said, it is very much a tool for intermediate to advanced users. Many of the more powerful features assume you already understand how traffic generators work. If you’re new to this space, expect a learning curve.
The bot recognizes captchas, but it doesn’t solve them natively. You’ll need access to a third-party captcha solving service, and in 2026 those services have become both more necessary and more varied in pricing - some charge per solve, some are subscriptions, so your actual total cost will vary.
STB works, and it works better than a lot of competing bots at a similar price point. For narrow use cases - like sending views to a CPM-monetized page - it can do the job. The 200-thread ceiling and the delay settings give it a legitimacy edge over simpler tools.
However, the $68 price tag is just the starting point. To get real mileage out of Supreme Traffic Bot, you’ll also need:
- A reliable private proxy list (public proxies are increasingly unreliable and flagged)
- A captcha solving service of your choice
Factor those in before committing, because the true cost of ownership is higher than the sticker price suggests.
Standard Warnings

I shouldn’t have to say this, but I will, because it comes up constantly. Supreme Traffic Bot is not real traffic. It’s not a traffic exchange. It’s not advertising. It is software that sends connections through proxies with spoofed browser data, designed specifically to trick per-view ad systems. The bot won’t click ads - unless you script it to - and it absolutely won’t buy products or generate genuine leads.
With ad fraud detection having advanced considerably by 2026, platforms like Google AdSense, Ezoic, and Mediavine are faster than ever at identifying and filtering artificial traffic. Using a bot like this on a monetized site carries real risk of account termination, so understand what you’re getting into.
Supreme Traffic Bot is good for what it’s designed to do. Outside of that narrow use case, it’s the wrong tool for the job - and in the wrong hands, it can do more harm than good. If you need legitimate ways to grow your traffic, there are better options worth exploring.
3 responses
Thoughtful replies only - we moderate for spam, AI slop, and off-topic rants.
Do you know if this bot will hurt SEO? Specifically I’m worried about the bounce rate but I’ve heard through the vines that Google doesn’t really take into account bounce rate as much anymore? Not really looking for top quality traffic. In my case, just want to pad my google analytics a bit as I need to show that to someone.
Google has a way of recognizing bot traffic by referencing a website for that purpose (I can’t remember the website). Even Alexa. Does supremetrafficbot have a way of circumventing that?
Can I get country based visit from supreme traffic bot