So I've been looking into this Grass thing lately, and honestly, the multi-account setup has become pretty common in the community. Here's what I'm seeing.



Basically, Grass rewards you for sharing idle bandwidth through the grass extension, and your earnings depend on uptime, network quality, and how much bandwidth you contribute. The problem is, running a single account caps your points pretty quick. That's why people are experimenting with multiple accounts to scale up.

The key rule though: Grass doesn't care if you run multiple accounts, but each one needs its own IP address and device ID. Get caught with duplicate IPs on the same network, and you're looking at points getting wiped or accounts getting banned. So that's the main constraint.

I've seen four main approaches floating around:

First, the straightforward way: multiple physical devices on different networks. Grab a couple of old phones or laptops, set up the grass extension on each, use different WiFi sources (home WiFi, mobile hotspot, borrowed network), and let them run. It works, but you're paying for multiple devices and data plans. Good for beginners though, since there's no technical complexity.

Second method uses virtual machines. Spin up 3-4 VMs on one powerful computer, install Chrome and the grass extension in each, assign different residential proxy IPs (avoid free VPNs, they get flagged), create separate accounts with different emails, and keep them online. You only need one computer, so costs are lower, but you're paying for proxy IPs—usually $5 to $20 monthly depending on quality. The technical bar is higher too.

Third option is Android-based. Download Kiwi Browser on an Android phone since it supports Chrome extensions, install the grass extension, then switch between different proxy IPs or SIM cards to run separate accounts in different browser profiles. It's mobile-friendly and simple, but manual switching gets tedious, and phones have performance limits.

Fourth is the hardcore approach: rent a VPS (Linux, Ubuntu), run a Grass bot script from GitHub, configure multiple user IDs with corresponding proxy IPs, and automate the whole thing. This scales well but needs programming knowledge and costs add up fast with VPS and proxies.

Now, the practical side. Grass officially says multiple accounts are fine as long as each has its own IP and device. But here's what matters: proxy IP quality is everything. Go cheap or use data center IPs, and the system might mark them as low-quality, tanking your earnings. Network stability matters too—higher uptime means better points.

Before scaling, start with 2-3 accounts to validate the method. Make sure your earnings actually cover the costs you're putting in. Right now, the $GRASS token price is volatile, so you're basically betting on future value. Also, check your local laws around proxy usage—most places are fine with residential proxies, but don't assume.

One thing people overlook: use the invitation system. Each account can invite new users and get a 20% bonus on their points. That stacks up pretty fast if you're running multiple accounts.

Monitor your Grass dashboard regularly—check points, network quality, and uptime for each account. Join the Grass Discord or Reddit for the latest tips and script updates; the community shares new tools and workarounds constantly.

So which method makes sense? If you're just testing it out, go with multiple devices and different networks. If you've got some technical chops and want to scale, virtual machines with residential proxies are the sweet spot between cost and complexity. The VPS + script route is for people running serious operations.

Bottom line: Grass multi-account setups are doable, but you need to respect the IP/device separation rule, invest in quality proxies if you go that route, and do the math on costs versus potential earnings. The grass extension is your main tool either way, so make sure it's running 24/7 to maximize uptime. Start small, test the method, then scale if it makes financial sense.
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