Running more than one account on the same platform used to mean juggling separate devices, VPNs, or hoping a browser's private mode was enough to keep your profiles apart. It never really was. Sites track far more than your IP address, and a single leaked fingerprint can get an entire batch of accounts flagged at once.
That's the problem anti-detect browsers were built to solve, and it's the space Incogniton has been working in for years. The platform just shipped its biggest update yet. Here's what V5 actually changes.
An anti-detect browser is a tool that lets you run multiple isolated browser profiles on one machine, each with its own digital fingerprint.

Every time you visit a website, your browser quietly hands over a pile of information about itself: your operating system, screen resolution, installed fonts, time zone, graphics card, and dozens of other small details. Combined, these details form what is called a browser fingerprint, and it is unique enough that websites can use it to recognise you even if you clear your cookies or switch IP addresses.
For most people, this is just background noise. For anyone running multiple accounts on the same platform, such as marketers, e-commerce sellers, affiliates, or researchers, it is a real problem. Standard browsers like Chrome or Firefox produce a single fingerprint per machine, so if you log into five different accounts from the same computer, the platform can often tell they are connected, even through separate browser profiles or incognito windows.
Instead of relying on incognito mode, which still leaks details like your canvas rendering, WebGL data, fonts, screen resolution, and time zone, an anti-detect browser assigns each profile a distinct, consistent set of these values, along with its own cookies, local storage, and proxy connection.
To a website, each profile looks like a completely separate device and user. That's what makes the category useful for social media managers, e-commerce sellers running multiple storefronts, affiliate marketers, and any team that needs several accounts on the same platform without them getting linked and banned together.
Incogniton is a Chromium-based anti-detect browser designed for multi-accounting. It is loaded with features like synchronizers, cookie collector, team features, on top of basic features like fingerprint customisation and proxy integration.

The browser has built a following among social media managers, e-commerce sellers running multiple storefronts, affiliate marketers, and teams that automate with browsers.
Incogniton V5 is a full rebuild of both the interface and the back end. It's the most significant change the platform has made since it introduced its V4 architecture, and it touches nearly every part of the product.

The headline of this release is a complete interface overhaul.
Many panels and functions have been reworked to cut down on the clicking and manual navigation that older versions required. If you have used a previous version of Incogniton, the layout will feel noticeably cleaner, and core actions like creating a profile or assigning a proxy take fewer steps to complete.
The most immediately visible change is a complete visual overhaul. The app now uses Incogniton's own brand colour tokens and the Geist typeface throughout, and dark mode has been extended to cover every part of the interface, including tables, drawers, context menus, modals, the sidebar, and the title bar.
The theme also switches automatically to match your system's light or dark mode preference, so you no longer have to set it manually.
The account and avatar menu has moved into the sidebar, grouping account information, the update check, and browser reinstall options in one place. Profile list rendering is noticeably faster, with no freeze when switching between groups.
The in-app Proxy Shop, which first appeared in V4, has been significantly rebuilt in V5. It now supports Residential, ISP, Premium ISP, Datacenter, Mobile, and Global ISP proxies through a guided purchase flow with live pricing, VAT handling, and a payment summary.

An Order History screen with Active and Expired tabs lets you manage invoices, update IP whitelists, edit static IPs, and control auto-renewal without leaving the application.
The proxy management section itself has also been expanded, adding bulk rotate, bulk edit, assign-to-profiles, a linked-profiles viewer, CSV export, group pinning, and quick group creation. A per-profile IP rotation button is now available directly from the profile list, and free proxy support has been added to proxy management for users on the free plan.
Previous versions handled extensions through a shared list that required manual ID entry. V5 introduces a dedicated Extensions tab for each browser profile, where you can add web-store extensions by URL or upload a custom extension file directly. You can also bulk-add extensions across multiple profiles from the profile list, which is a meaningful time-saver for anyone managing a large number of accounts that all need the same set of tools.
The Cookie Collector, which warms up new profiles by generating organic-looking browsing history, can now save and reuse sets of warm-up URLs.

Rather than re-entering your list every time you create a batch of profiles, you save a URL set once and apply it as needed. A live progress bar and countdown now show during collection runs.
V5 adds several profile workflow features that were missing before. Profiles can be cloned directly from the profile list. They can be imported and exported via CSV through a two-stage review table with drag-and-drop support. Profiles can be pinned to the top of the list, and that pin syncs across devices.
Cloud profiles can be disabled and restored from a new Disabled tab in the Archived screen. A per-profile clean-cookies action syncs cloud data before clearing, so nothing gets accidentally restored on the next sync.
This is the most technically significant addition in V5. Incogniton now ships with a public REST automation API covering profile creation, reading, updating, and deletion, plus launch and stop controls, cookie management, and Puppeteer and Selenium grid endpoints on localhost.

Alongside this, V5 introduces an MCP token system. An in-app generator produces copy-ready configuration for Claude Desktop, Claude Code, Cursor, Windsurf, VS Code, and Codex CLI. This means Incogniton can be used as a browser automation layer from within AI coding tools and agent workflows, not just through traditional Selenium or Puppeteer scripts. For users building automated multi-account workflows, this is a meaningful step forward.
New users get a guided setup walkthrough on first launch, including a language selector and a silent background browser download, and the tutorial can be replayed anytime from Settings. The app now supports seven languages, including new additions Spanish and Vietnamese, with live switching available on the login and registration screens as well as inside the app.
V5.0.0.4 adds automatic fallback to a backup connection for users in regions where Incogniton's main servers are hard to reach, so login and profile launching can recover without needing a VPN. That same patch brought the browser core up to Chrome 149, which applies to new profiles and the "latest user-agent" option.
Incogniton V5 is the most substantial update the platform has shipped. The interface rebuild, expanded team management, rebuilt Proxy Shop, per-profile extensions, Cookie Collector URL sets, and the MCP automation integration are not cosmetic changes; they close several gaps that held previous versions back, particularly for teams and for users who want to connect Incogniton to broader automation and AI-assisted workflows.
So for existing users, V5 is worth updating. For anyone evaluating anti-detect browsers for the first time, the new onboarding flow and cleaner interface make the free 10-profile trial a considerably better starting point than it was before.