Distance is another key factor in a great gaming experience, especially for those on consoles (for PC games it is less of a concern).
The GeoFencing features and ability to block high-lag players are interesting.
The question raised about whether the claimed gaming traffic prioritization really works is always the tough one to answer.
And no, we won't be reviewing it. I could not do a good job of reviewing the gaming features, nor could any of my usual reviewers. Sorry.
This is just a theory as I haven't seen their implementation, but if it's done at iptables's level through blacklists, that's something any Linux-router can do, but it does carry a fairly hefty performance penalty, as blocking a country requires multiple rules to block all that country's allocated prefixes.
You can probably do the same thing with Tomato/DD-WRT/Asuswrt-Merlin, as long you do it manually.
Unless the blocking is done within a proprietary engine, which might possibly be more efficient than iptable rules.
I have to say it has really helped with my console experience. I have the unit set to kick in when it notices gaming traffic only, you can have it set to be on all the time or not at all. The DPI engine seems to work well at recognising gaming traffic and a speed test shows the bandwidth prioritisation kicking in very quickly, also there is a set of games with defined rules that you select for what you are playing which is updated time to time or you can define your own for the Geo Filter. I don't really need QoS on 24/7 so the setting I have chosen works well for myself.I am not a gamer. But this router has a few features that don't seem like the typical mumbo-jumbo that is in most gaming routers.
- The router works with any device, unlike the Linksys/Killer approach
- The GeoFencing features and ability to block high-lag players are interesting.
The question raised about whether the claimed gaming traffic prioritization really works is always the tough one to answer.
And no, we won't be reviewing it. I could not do a good job of reviewing the gaming features, nor could any of my usual reviewers. Sorry.
The article is clearly identified as a "Sponsored Post". It is a form of advertising commonly found today.This reads like an ad for netgear. What about Asus gaming router?
It's an R7800, except for twice the flash memory. R7800 has already been reviewed.Tim, I think you should review from a non-gamers perspective and obviously skip the gaming features. Yes, I realize it’s reviewing half the routers feature set – however, some of us are more interested in your in-depth testing of the hardware. It would be very useful for us who are on the fence about this router.
It's an R7800, except for twice the flash memory. R7800 has already been reviewed.
But with a different OS?It's an R7800, except for twice the flash memory. R7800 has already been reviewed.
But with a different OS?
Curious, with DumaOS do you expect a more stable/bug-free environment or will it just complicate Netgear's support situaton?
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