
Clash Party
If you do not depend on an old profile or a specific tutorial, start with Clash Party. It is the clearer starting point for this use case.
Clash for Windows: Widely referenced in older tutorials, but new users should check source and maintenance status carefully. Clash Party: Better for users who already understand Mihomo profiles and proxy group workflows.
Compare Clash for Windows and Clash Party by platform support, maintenance status, subscription import, proxy modes, tutorial coverage and best-fit users before choosing.
| Item | Clash for Windows | Clash Party |
|---|---|---|
| Best for | Users with specific legacy setup needs | Desktop users already comfortable with Mihomo |
| Learning curve | Medium | Medium |
| Supported platforms | Windows / Mac | Windows / Mac |
| Subscription import | Subscription link and profile files | Subscription and profile management |
| Proxy modes | System proxy, rule and global | Rules, proxy groups and system proxy |
| Core / ecosystem | Clash | Mihomo |
| Positioning | Classic legacy desktop client | Lightweight Mihomo GUI |
| Repository / store status | GitHub API returned 404 | Active, not archived |
| Releases / store page | View releases | View releases |
| Links | Clash for Windows / Tutorial | Clash Party / Tutorial |
| Repository | Fndroid/clash_for_windows_pkg | mihomo-party-org/clash-party |
| Public repository | Original repo is currently inaccessible | Yes, public GitHub repository |
| Open-source status | Public source status is currently unverified | Yes, public repo with GPL-3.0 license |
| License | Currently unverified | GPL-3.0 |
| Author / maintainer | Fndroid | mihomo-party-org |
| Official source type | Historical GitHub repository | GitHub repository |
| Verification source | GitHub API, 2026-05-18 | GitHub API, 2026-05-18 |
For a new setup, start with Clash Party when it matches your platform and workflow; choose Clash for Windows when you rely on existing profiles, older tutorials or a specific feature.

If you do not depend on an old profile or a specific tutorial, start with Clash Party. It is the clearer starting point for this use case.

Choose Clash for Windows when you already use it, or when a tutorial, profile or required feature clearly depends on it.
New users should follow the default pick; existing users should check migration fit first. If you already have a related setup or a tutorial requires it, Clash for Windows still makes sense.