Re: Realtek Gaming 2.5gbe Family Controller Network Lag/Delay
Posted: 11 Jun 2025, 03:54
Unfortunately, I can’t suggest anything, because I don’t have enough information about your network cards.
Who you gonna call? The Blur Busters! For Everything Better Than 60Hz™
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Hey, just trying it, but. Have you tried playing with "Advanced EEE" and "EEE"? As I see it's just entirely disabling or enabling EEE and Max Support Speed.gideonmontes wrote: ↑11 Jun 2025, 03:54Unfortunately, I can’t suggest anything, because I don’t have enough information about your network cards.
This is because you need the Realtek PCIe 2.5GbE Family Controller driver (device manager should show like this). Enjoy your 2days effect buddy!bwainzz wrote: ↑10 Jun 2025, 20:00My realtek nic not show this option, motherboard is a B550 Gaming Plus MSI, you can help?gideonmontes wrote: ↑10 Jun 2025, 15:39Lv. wrote: ↑09 Jun 2025, 05:30gideonmontes wrote: ↑07 Jun 2025, 05:50Guys, try limiting EEE Max Support Speed to 10 Mbps.
Here's what people write about this setting on the Internet: EEE max support speed usually indicates the maximum network speed (e.g. 1 Gbps or 10 Gbps) up to which EEE technology can be applied. For example, if you have a switch with EEE functionality and its "EEE max support speed" is 1 Gbps, this means that EEE can only be activated on networks with a maximum speed of up to 1 Gbps.
Now let's imagine that we have a network device, such as a switch, and its specifications specify a parameter called "EEE max support speed". If this parameter is, for example, 1 Gbps, this means that EEE will only work on this device for networks where the maximum speed does not exceed 1 Gbps. If the network is running at 10Gbps, EEE will not be activated and the device will operate at full power without turning on power saving mode.
Wherever I look at various video settings, for some reason everyone always recommends setting it to 1 Gbps or more.
Woow, played a few faceit pugs @level 10 and my bullets seems to be connecting, wtf?
let me play a few more days/week to see if it keeps like this.
Thanks!!
Oh, glad you have everything working as it should. Once I changed this setting, everything works fine for me. By the way, many people wrote about the bad picture, as if you were playing on a 60Hz monitor. I learned something.Recently I changed the RAM on my PC and noticed that when I turned on the PC the red DRAM indicator was on, and then the GPU. I went to the forums to read what it could mean. I'll say right away that the video card and everything else is functioning normally. So, after reading on forums, most of them were related to Display Port cables. On various video cards, starting from the 2000 rtx series and ending with the 5000 series. In general, when turning on the PC, the monitor should be turned off with the button. When the operating system loads, turn on the monitor. After that, you need to switch the output in the monitor settings to HDMI (even if you do not have an HDMI cable connected). Then switch back to Display Port. Voila, personally, my picture is absolutely smooth after that, I am even now replaying Assassins Creed 2 in 59 fps, I would never have thought that 59 fps is very smooth.
if u said u tested a lot of things then get the isp to check ur cable connection to the pole outside ur house/apartment just track down where u get ur internet from and make them check it physically if they say its not a problem the maaaain problem is faulty node check for quite some time with pingplotter or if u are advanced with wireshark you will need good evidence and some money but u wont have problems after goodluck!n1ghtik wrote: ↑20 Jun 2025, 02:44I own a b650 board with realtek nic, I bought an external pcie card with intel chip, the problem remains, my hitreg depends on the time of day. I have no problem with electricity or floaty mouse, my sens in game moves great. In one game I can make 3 quick headshots with deagle in another game I score 5-25 with the feeling that my opponents have a 300-400ms advantage.
From my findings I think it is a problem with isp, I chose another provider which has a different upstream provider from bgpview.io data but the problem remains
The game server monitors the packets I send it and in response sends me information about loss and jitter, but at any time of day my jitter does not change, it also stays between 1-5ms, as well as ping and loss.
How can I track this problem?
I tracked a couple of games with pingplloterdrosku wrote: ↑20 Jun 2025, 07:23if u said u tested a lot of things then get the isp to check ur cable connection to the pole outside ur house/apartment just track down where u get ur internet from and make them check it physically if they say its not a problem the maaaain problem is faulty node check for quite some time with pingplotter or if u are advanced with wireshark you will need good evidence and some money but u wont have problems after goodluck!n1ghtik wrote: ↑20 Jun 2025, 02:44I own a b650 board with realtek nic, I bought an external pcie card with intel chip, the problem remains, my hitreg depends on the time of day. I have no problem with electricity or floaty mouse, my sens in game moves great. In one game I can make 3 quick headshots with deagle in another game I score 5-25 with the feeling that my opponents have a 300-400ms advantage.
From my findings I think it is a problem with isp, I chose another provider which has a different upstream provider from bgpview.io data but the problem remains
The game server monitors the packets I send it and in response sends me information about loss and jitter, but at any time of day my jitter does not change, it also stays between 1-5ms, as well as ping and loss.
How can I track this problem?
I can give you a small troubleshooting list:
hey thanks for replykyube wrote: ↑21 Jun 2025, 09:38I can give you a small troubleshooting list:
- Ensure optimal power quality, both in your house & (less SMPS in house are better, relying on linear PSUs is good)
- Ensure your ISP routing is "good" with minimal re-routes (closer to server = better)
- Ensure your networking hardware is OK (check cables, routers, switches etc.)
- Ensure your HW stability (either thro stress-testing or running maximum data integrity HW with ECC ram)
- Ensure your SW stack is in-tact (applying only parameters with known benefits)
Each of these topics encompasses a vast majority of sub-topics.
My guess is that you're battling with the 4th issue.