Game overlay networks, game onion networks, game VPNs, they’re all words for the same thing. Like mudfish http://mudfish.net

For people playing across the globe, you connect to their servers, and they give you a better global transit to the other side of the planet. For better latency for games.

Do people have recommendations for a game performance network they use? They’ve had good experiences with?

I’ve been playing with mud fish, and it’s okay, I was just hoping people had some other recommendations.

  • @[email protected]
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    101 year ago

    They’re literally junk, that’s there to collect your data, while also sometimes charging you for the privilege. It’s snake oil. VPNs CAN help play geo-restricted games/content, and hide your IP from malicious gamers (eg: Dead by Daylight is known to leak your IP, to those you’re playing with), but beyond that… yeah, no. Any benefits you’re getting is placebo. If anything it’ll be worse, due to the added latency of hitting the VPN server, then going to the games server.

    If you must use one, at least look at a VPN that’s privacy respecting. Something like ProtonVPN, Mullvad, Windscribe, or IVPN.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      -41 year ago

      They can be a benefit if you could benefit from multi-hop re-routing.

      i.e. your playing in PI and you have a non-congested connection to hong kong, and from there you connect to LA, to make sure you use the efficient links without congestion.

      If your playing with <150ms RTT to servers, then game networks wont help.

      Sometimes comcast has bad routes and forcing a destination to go via a different route can be beneficial.