We actually offered 50TB virtual servers for an reasonable price (~$120/month) a couple years ago (max of 4 per gigabit node). Couldn't find a market for them, anyone interested in that much bandwidth and looking for a reliable solution is only looking for dedicated servers and are able to spend more with ease.
100TB usually ends up being around 400-450mbps 95th percentile. Even if you have peering and the lowest price transit, you're looking at $0.50/mbps when including the price of the routers/switches. So if someone actually uses 400mbps, you're looking at $200/month and that's best case scenario. Realistically, there are only a few providers that offer under $0.50/mbps and if you're trying to build a network with them, you're either going to have to find a datacenter that features all of them (likely expensive like Equinix) or you're going to have to buy transport which will raise the cost per meg.
In conclusion, 100TB on a VPS is only possible if the node features 10-gigabit connectivity and if the price is well over $100/month.
100TB usually ends up being around 400-450mbps 95th percentile. Even if you have peering and the lowest price transit, you're looking at $0.50/mbps when including the price of the routers/switches. So if someone actually uses 400mbps, you're looking at $200/month and that's best case scenario. Realistically, there are only a few providers that offer under $0.50/mbps and if you're trying to build a network with them, you're either going to have to find a datacenter that features all of them (likely expensive like Equinix) or you're going to have to buy transport which will raise the cost per meg.
In conclusion, 100TB on a VPS is only possible if the node features 10-gigabit connectivity and if the price is well over $100/month.