Target restocks and TCG drops
Target's high-demand restocks, including trading card releases, draw heavy automated traffic, and the site meets it with queue logic and IP scoring. Addresses that look automated or come from saturated pools get held back.
Residential IPs read as ordinary Target shoppers, and a dedicated pool keeps that segment fresh for the members using it.
The Target pool
Target is a selectable pool on Summit, chosen per generation. It routes through the residential segment kept for Target tasks, and sits alongside the general, Walmart, Shopify, and Pokémon Center pools.
Holding an IP through a Target queue
For queue-gated drops, use a sticky session so your task holds one residential IP from the waiting room through checkout. Switching IPs mid-queue is a common reason a task loses its place.
For broad monitoring, rotating sessions give a new IP per request. Build one list of each in the generator.
Frequently asked questions
Do you have a Target pool?
Yes. Target is a selectable pool, chosen per generation, routing through the residential segment kept for Target tasks.
Are sticky sessions good for Target queues?
Yes. A sticky session pins one IP for the session so your task holds its place from the queue through checkout rather than being bounced for changing addresses.
Claim a slot while the register is open
Summit is capped at 1,000 active members. Data is sold per GB and never expires. Join directly while slots remain, then generate proxies from the dashboard.
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