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Two 5GHz and one 2. Beaming one 2. Having too many devices connected to a single or dual-band router leaves your network congested and sluggish. Improve your coverage with advanced AC SmartBeam technology that directs bandwidth to your devices as you move around your home.

See who is connected to your router, change settings, or block someone from using your network connection, all from an Internet connected PC, tablet, or smartphone. Parents can monitor what sites their children are visiting, to stay informed and in control on the go. Every one of your devices deserves the best Wi-Fi signal all the time. Stream HD media faster, transfer large files really fast and enjoy lag-free gaming.

Experience the ultimate in lag-free gaming and 4K media streaming. For more information visit — www. Skip to page main content Skip to page footer. SmartConnect Allocates the best possible band for optimal performance. DIRL Mbps. Advanced AC SmartBeam. Use mydlink Lite to Monitor Your Network. Do it all at the same time, with no compromise in performance. If that's the case for you, then you might be thinking about upgrading your wireless router.

Before buying any routers for gaming, I'd recommend reading my beginner's guide to gaming lag to see if there's anything else you can do to help bring down your ping. In many cases, it could be as easy as moving your wireless router to a different spot or adjusting the angle of a standard router's antennas. But if you've tried all that and your gaming connection still needs an upgrade, you're reading the right roundup.

There are plenty of gaming routers out there that promise to boost your gaming performance -- but which are truly the best gaming routers? Is it worth splurging on a wireless gaming router that supports the speedy new Wi-Fi 6 standard? That's what I wanted to know, so I started testing the things out, on a personal quest to find the fastest router to boost my internet connection. This buyer's guide -- which I'll update periodically -- encompasses everything I've found so far, starting with the models I think you should zero in on first in your hunt for the best gaming router.

Read more : Best internet providers for gaming. Get smart home reviews and ratings, video reviews, buying guides, prices and comparisons from CNET.

First up is the first gaming router I'd recommend to most people, and a router I'd recommend to just about anybody, truth be told. We liked that previous model for its fast, steady speeds, its impressive lineup of gamer-centric features and its strong finish in our latency tests.

Whenever I test a router, I end up logging at least different speed test results, including the ping time it takes for the router to send a signal to a remote server and receive a response. Most routers do pretty well, save for the occasional spike. Latency spikes like those can be a killer when you're gaming online -- but fortunately, the RT-AX86U earned the lowest average ping time of any router I've ever tested, never spiking any higher than 25ms. That's an outstanding result.

Beyond managing lag, Asus also boasts an excellent router app and web control interface for easy setup, along with helpful features like a quality-of-service engine, a mobile boost mode for gaming on your phone and lots of other ways to optimize your connection.

Plus, the design is gamer-friendly without being too over-the-top. If you want a gaming-minded wireless router upgrade but you're worried about buying more than you need, look no further -- this gaming router hits the sweet spot.

It held its own on the speedier 5GHz band, too, beating out several wireless routers that cost significantly more. Die-hards will likely want more features focused on their gaming experience and performance, but the DIR gaming router at least includes a quality of service engine to let you prioritize gaming traffic above other types of network traffic.

That's enough for most -- especially if you don't want to break the bank on something fancier. Just note that it's getting difficult to find this model in stores, as stock seems to be running low.

We'll update this space once we find another affordable option that we like as much. In fact, the GT-AC was one of the top finishers in terms of average download speeds, latency and range. It offers the same excellent suite of gaming features as other gaming routers from Asus, including a customizable Quality of Service engine and game-and-platform-specific open NAT port-forwarding rules.

If you're looking for a router with gaming-minded key features and design, but you're also interested in multipoint mesh networking, then take a look at the Amplifi HD Gamer's Edition from Ubiquiti.

It wasn't a standout in our lab-based top-speed tests, but with plug-in range extenders that are about as easy to use as it gets, it excels at spreading a stable, speedy Wi-Fi signal from room to room. On top of that, the unique, attractive design doesn't take up an obnoxious amount of space -- and with a touchscreen on the front and LED lights around the base, you'll actually want it to sit out in the open, where the mesh router performs better.

You'll also appreciate the app's easy-to-use features, including a dedicated low-latency mode that can help you tweak your connection and avoid lag on multiple devices. Along with seeing how today's gaming routers stacked up against one another, I wanted to get a sense of how they compared with the sort of standard routers that you might be tempted to upgrade from.

Given that a few of these gaming routers use next-gen Wi-Fi 6 technology, I made sure to test a few other Wi-Fi 6 routers, too.

All told, that left us with more than a dozen routers to test. Here's the full list, from least to most expensive prices as of Jan.

Testing routers is a tricky business. Wi-Fi connections are finicky, with lots of variables and key features that will affect your speeds. We do our best to account for those variables in our tests, but some factors are beyond our control -- and beyond your router's control, too.

For instance, your home's specific internet service provider connection is like a speed limit for your router. If you're paying for speeds of up to, say, 50 megabits per second, then your router won't transmit data from the cloud any faster than that. The average ISP download speed in the US is somewhere around Mbps, while those living in areas with access to fiber connections might enjoy speeds of , or -- if they're really lucky -- even 1,Mbps.

Read more : The best racing wheels and pedals for iRacing and your budget. Our approach bypasses the ISP entirely. Instead of using a modem to pull data from the cloud, we pull data from a local server using a wired connection.

Our local server of choice is a MacBook Pro. We connect it to the router using a CAT 7 Ethernet cable to keep interference as low as possible, plus we use an adapter to connect to the MacBook's Thunderbolt 3 port, since it supports data transfer speeds that are plenty fast for our purposes. From there, we take a second laptop and connect to the router's wireless network; then we clock the speeds as we download the data that the router is fetching from the MacBook via that wired connection.

We run this test several times on each router's 2. In the end, we get a great look at how quickly each router is able to transmit data to a connected device like your phone, gaming PC, gaming laptop or gaming console of choice. Yes, you'll see much faster speeds if you connect that gaming console directly to the router via Ethernet cable. We tested those wired speeds too and didn't see any noticeable difference between any of the routers we measured. Each came within a megabit or two of Mbps, which is what you'd expect from a Gigabit Ethernet connection.

As for wireless speeds, the graph above shows the top speeds for each router on both the 2. Here's what jumps out at me from these results. First, it's easy to spot the three Wi-Fi 6 routers we tested up at the top -- they clocked top speeds on the 5GHz band that were much, much faster than any other router we tested. Bear in mind that we're running these speed tests on a laptop that supports Wi-Fi 6!

If we weren't, those bars would likely be a lot shorter. When we increased the distance to 75 feet, the average speed fell to Mbps, which is still a faster speed than any of the Wi-Fi 5 routers we tested were able to reach at all, even up close. I should note that those Wi-Fi 6 routers didn't blow the competition away on the 2. In fact, the router with the fastest average speeds across all distances on the 2.

Right behind it, the D-Link DIR, which also holds the distinction of being the cheapest router we tested for this roundup. That, coupled with the fact that it includes a Quality of Service engine that can prioritize gaming traffic, is what made it an easy value pick among this field. That Netgear model was also the fastest Wi-Fi 5 router on the 5GHz band, which tells us that it's a pretty capable piece of hardware.

One last note: We don't have full access to our test lab this year as a result of the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, so we haven't been able to run this same test with some of the newer models we've reviewed. Once we're able to test everything in a controlled setting once more, we'll update this section with fresh data.



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