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Message
Huge Lag Spikes Out of No Where?
Posted on 1/15/19 at 10:52 am
Posted on 1/15/19 at 10:52 am
My PC has been running games smoothly up until a few days ago. Now I'll get huge spikes where the game will stop but I'll keep moving, then everything kind of rubber bands back into place. I've reset my router and restarted my PC. I have no idea how else to fix it, and really don't want to have to call my ISP to talk to them about it.
Any Ideas?
Any Ideas?
Posted on 1/15/19 at 11:10 am to Shiftyplus1
What game(s)? Most online games will let you display network info on screen so you can see if/when you're having problems
Posted on 1/15/19 at 11:26 am to Shiftyplus1
Is it only games where you see this behavior? Is it only on that PC? You really need to determine if it's behavior isolated to that specific PC or if it's affecting your entire network. To examine that PC, you could setup a continuous ping by going to a command prompt and typing in something like:
ping www.google.com -t
Look for pings that take an unusual amount of time to return a response or packet loss. (You can stop the continuous ping with Ctrl-C.) Then check to see if there is any pattern to it or correlation with other things going on on your PC like an application taking a backup for offsite storage like Carbonite or something similar. Probably wouldn't hurt to run a virus scan too for malicious software.
However, if you're seeing spikes for all devices within your network look for other culprits like someone else within your household using a lot of bandwidth or an entirely different device. You could try temporarily changing your wifi password to ensure nothing else is on your network than what is plugged directly into it.
ping www.google.com -t
Look for pings that take an unusual amount of time to return a response or packet loss. (You can stop the continuous ping with Ctrl-C.) Then check to see if there is any pattern to it or correlation with other things going on on your PC like an application taking a backup for offsite storage like Carbonite or something similar. Probably wouldn't hurt to run a virus scan too for malicious software.
However, if you're seeing spikes for all devices within your network look for other culprits like someone else within your household using a lot of bandwidth or an entirely different device. You could try temporarily changing your wifi password to ensure nothing else is on your network than what is plugged directly into it.
Posted on 1/15/19 at 12:52 pm to Shiftyplus1
Probably some packet loss
Posted on 1/16/19 at 5:57 am to Shiftyplus1
You in wifi? If so, switch to wired.
Start there.
Start there.
Posted on 1/16/19 at 8:50 am to SG_Geaux
quote:
You in wifi? If so, switch to wired.
I feel like this should be obvious, but so many people really don’t think about it.
Posted on 1/16/19 at 10:05 am to McCaigBro69
Go to your cmd prompt and type "ping www.google.com -t" (without the ""). See if you have packetloss.
Posted on 1/16/19 at 9:12 pm to Shiftyplus1
Tell your boyfriend to stop jerking it on chaturbate while you're trying to play.
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