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I'll say this once. The kill switch thing, it sounds good in theory right? Like you got a VPN, your connection drops, the kill switch kicks in and blocks all traffic. Stops leaks. But in real world tests its messier. I mean some providers say they got a kill switch but then you find out it only works on specific apps or on certain protocols. Or its unreliable when your network flickers. Ive tested a few and honestly its like playing Russian roulette. Some just kill your entire internet if they detect a disconnect, others only block certain apps. Which is better? Depends on your setup. But the real question is do you even need a kill switch at all? If your VPN is solid, no leaks, stable connection, then maybe not. But if youre doing sensitive stuff or torrenting and you want extra peace of mind, then yeah, you probably want a kill switch. Just dont rely blindly on the feature. Do your own tests. Disconnect your VPN, see what happens. Does your traffic drop or leak? If it leaks, its useless. If it kills everything cleanly, then you got smth reliable. But remember, some providers make it sound like a feature that works perfectly every time. Reality? Not so much. And some kill switches just cause more problems than they solve, dropping your connection when you don't want it to. So I guess the takeaway is, understand your provider's kill switch, test it in real world conditions, and don't assume it's foolproof. Sometimes the simplest solution is just good VPN hygiene, not relying on some fancy feature.