F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Slow response times in peer-to-peer networks.

Slow response times in peer-to-peer networks.

Slow response times in peer-to-peer networks.

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EmmaPrinces
Member
152
08-01-2016, 05:19 AM
#1
Hello, your internet connection seems to struggle with peer-to-peer links. On server-based games you get about 40 ms, but in P2P play it jumps to 90-160 ms. This occurs whenever you join a server or host a game, with similar ping for others joining. It happens across various games and when using emulation tools like Hamachi.
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EmmaPrinces
08-01-2016, 05:19 AM #1

Hello, your internet connection seems to struggle with peer-to-peer links. On server-based games you get about 40 ms, but in P2P play it jumps to 90-160 ms. This occurs whenever you join a server or host a game, with similar ping for others joining. It happens across various games and when using emulation tools like Hamachi.

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Fullalexis10
Member
167
08-03-2016, 01:14 AM
#2
Bump
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Fullalexis10
08-03-2016, 01:14 AM #2

Bump

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IamPiggy
Member
242
08-03-2016, 08:13 AM
#3
Where you are and where you're linking up? P2P isn't stable and likely depends on your ISP's traffic path. You can verify this by looking up the IP you're using and running a tracert to see the connection steps and timing.
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IamPiggy
08-03-2016, 08:13 AM #3

Where you are and where you're linking up? P2P isn't stable and likely depends on your ISP's traffic path. You can verify this by looking up the IP you're using and running a tracert to see the connection steps and timing.

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lovelyhatch
Junior Member
9
08-03-2016, 11:59 AM
#4
I'm based in Poland, and it doesn't matter who I connect with. My ping is the same as friends nearby or people from Belgium. And what's tracert for?
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lovelyhatch
08-03-2016, 11:59 AM #4

I'm based in Poland, and it doesn't matter who I connect with. My ping is the same as friends nearby or people from Belgium. And what's tracert for?

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War91
Member
186
08-03-2016, 09:14 PM
#5
It seems your ISP is directing your data through specific paths. You can check this by running a command prompt and typing tracert with your IP address. This will display the routes your ISP takes and the time it takes between locations.
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War91
08-03-2016, 09:14 PM #5

It seems your ISP is directing your data through specific paths. You can check this by running a command prompt and typing tracert with your IP address. This will display the routes your ISP takes and the time it takes between locations.