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3761 Views 18 Replies Latest reply: Jul 23, 2012 7:45 AM by RAMBONER RSS
RAMBONER Expert 1,073 posts since
Nov 18, 2011
Currently Being Moderated

Jul 21, 2012 11:38 AM

If you are hardwired with an open NAT does your modem matter??

I am just curious if you are hardwired and your NAT is open does it matter what type of modem you have?  I know some of them like Netgear etc. are supposed to be much better but that seems to me like it would only help wireless since an open NAT means the modem is not restricting data flow anyway and obviously if you are hardwired the signal strength is also meaningless.

 

Oh and I am pretty much a computer dumbass so I only know what I do know from reading the forum and other places online. 

  • ogkshemiramoth Novice 99 posts since
    Aug 16, 2011

    no, i don't believe it matters... i rent my modem from the cable company, i have a linksys E3000 wireless n router, but i too am hardwired because i want the best speed i can get out of my internet when i am playing games... i think all that matters in this case is how good your internet is.

  • ghamorra Master 8,786 posts since
    Sep 17, 2011

    Anytime you're hardwired you connection by default will be better. If that's what your asking

  • rlbl Master 6,046 posts since
    Sep 8, 2011

    To answer your question directly, the answer is no.

     

    If all you ports are open (e.g. you have uPNP enabled or you have manually opened your ports), changing your router will do nothing as long as the router is at least capable of supplying the bandwidth that you are paying for (but even older G routers do 54MB on the LAN ports).

     

    If you were wireless, that is a different story...

     

    Some companies sell "Gaming Routers" but for the most part, they are just equipped with features automatically turned on that most newer routers already have (e.g. They are selling ice to Eskimos)

     

    If your router can:

    - Enable uPnP;

    - has 10/100 ports (lol they all do, having a Gb port is OVERKILL as you do not even get that much bandwidth from your ISP)*;

    - Has QoS capabilities (and even this is not required unless you are doing other things on your network);

     

    Then changing your router will get you no better results.  Because of the MW3 connection issues, people are spending a lot of time reconfiguring their networks. I am not saying that doing so will or will not improvie your gaming experience, however why do we have to be doing this when the older games (MW2 and below) run just fine (BO was not great at times, but was better than MW3). It is matchmaking. Not your router, not your ISP, not your wife surfing porn while you are trying to get a MOAB...

     

    It is matchmaking.

     

     

    * having faster ports can be useful if transfering stuff over your home LAN... but once it goes on the WAN you are limited to the slowest (or really better stated, smallest) pipe. Here, if you pay for 30Mb from you ISP, why do you need a GB port to your PS3???

     

    Some people need a source; here s a simple read that backs up what a lot of people are saying:

     

    http://www.extremetech.com/computing/83298-how-to-configure-your-router-for-gami ng/

  • luke_h Novice 101 posts since
    Nov 8, 2011

    Good question if you see me post I am just about to get a gaming router for my birthday ... grrrr is it really gonna make the game any better for ppl with very high internet speeds?

    • rlbl Master 6,046 posts since
      Sep 8, 2011

      simple answer:

       

      You are always limited by the smallest pipe in the network. If you have a 100MB/s connection to your ISP, great!  But if you are trying to connect to someone would has a 5MB connection, your connection between you is going to be delimited by the smallest pipe* (e.g. 5MB of bandwidth... not I am not even touching ping/latency etc...)

       

      If you pay for more Bandwidth than a non-gaming router supplies (e.g. more than 100MB/s): you will (at times) be able to maximize your throughput.  But remember that a non-gaming router has 10/100 ports... 1GB ports are extreme overkill.

       

      (*ever notice how you can do a ping test and it shows you have a 20MB d/2Mb u connection, but when you download a file it comes in at 250kb/s?)

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