This is the Wireless Buying Advice Forum. May the best/most suitable router win.
Asus is in the lead for a reason and has been for a long time. Same for the third-party firmware and scripts. AX (or how I see them the 'latest') routers are not just for early adaptors. They are also for people that have tried and tested the best current AC routers and still found the latest AX models superior and still within their budgets too.
As for the false statements made about 'high failure rates' and what-not, that should be taken with a grain of salt too. It doesn't work for everyone? Shock. That is not guaranteed by any manufacturer anyways. Buy, test and keep what works. Nothing special here. Applies to all products sold today and in the future too.
Recommendations for more expensive and lessor performing equipment is questionable, at best. With a limitless budget, everyone should have a Ruckus system in their home and have it installed professionally too.
For everyone else that wants the best WiFi router experience, including performance, security and long term support at affordable prices vs. the competition? Asus is doing a very good job by itself. With RMerlin (oh no! a third-party firmware developer) and amtm (built-in, no less) plus powerful, user-friendly scripts? What competition? Particularly when these purchases can be planned for and bought on sale.
The
single AiMesh installation I have performed was almost too easy with
@OzarkEdge's excellent install notes and two RT-AC86U's that haven't even hiccuped for the owner for several weeks now (and a lot of complaints from the other household users beforehand). I used to call it AiMess, in jest. But I am slowly turning into an AiMesh believer myself. And yes, I have called these customers every week to ask how their experience is (as I told them I would).
https://www.snbforums.com/threads/o...-supported-products.44375/page-14#post-381537
The best part about using routers in AiMesh? They can be repurposed at any time as needed in the future back into routers, media Bridge mode, repeaters, etc. Not the same can be said for the more expensive suggestion here and their 'one-trick' pony shows.
Giving a poster a suggestion/different choice is great when the choice offers something tangible. Doing it merely to show Asus in a bad light is not very ingenious and is not doing anyone any favors here.
For over half a decade I have recommended, set up and installed Asus routers to many, many customers. Many of them were coming from other brands they were loyal to, too. All saw the benefits I predicted for their networks.
What is even more of a testament is that many of those first installs are still in service for some of those customers.
Not only just 'in service', but also with up-to-date features (thank you
@RMerlin, @john5927 and so many others that contribute to these joint efforts), up-to-date security and still with enough performance, stability, and reliability to meet and even exceed the ISP and LAN requirements of those customers even today.
Don't be daunted by 'hundreds' of settings. Nobody offers that.
Be grateful that those options are there though, if and when you need them as your network usage and requirements invariably rise.