VPN speed tests: raw data and my skeptical take

VPN speed tests: raw data and my skeptical take

Ambush

New member
Alright, so I've been poking around the VPN world again, doing my usual grind of speed tests, and I gotta say I'm a bit skeptical about all the hype out there. Everyone just parrots the same numbers but the real story is in the details. So here's what I did, set up a simple test bench, used fast.com, speedtest.net, and some raw iperf3 measurements. I tested 5 popular VPNs on the same hardware, same location, same time of day, and here are the results that jumped out to me. First off, NordVPN. Their claimed speeds are always impressive, but in my test, I got about 85 Mbps download and 20 Mbps upload on a 100 Mbps connection. Not bad, but not the 95 Mbps they advertise. Then ProtonVPN. Their no-log claims sound good, but speed wise I was only hitting 60 Mbps down, 15 up. Honestly, that's pretty meh. ExpressVPN? Pretty close to advertised with 92 Mbps down, 21 up. So they do deliver on the hype, but only marginally. Now, the real surprise, Surfshark. Everyone says it's fast, but I only saw 70 Mbps down, 18 up. Good, but not as fast as they claim. But here's where the skepticism kicks in all these numbers are on a gigabit connection, and the bottleneck is often the VPN server, not ur local network. Plus, latency jumps too - on some servers, I was seeing 120 ms, on others only 35 ms. And that's a big deal when u are streaming or gaming. It's easy to get caught up in the marketing hype, but the real numbers tell a different story. If u ask me, most VPNs are playing catch-up trying to deliver the promise, but the actual speed and latency depend heavily on the server, protocol, and load at that moment. So next time u see a VPN claiming 'blazing fast speeds', ask for real-world numbers like these. Because unless u do your own tests, all those flashy ads are just noise. Stay skeptical, do ur own tests, and don't just trust the hype
 
Honestly, I think you're a bit too quick to dismiss the hype. These numbers are still pretty good considering the max potential of most tier-2 servers. Yeah, the bottleneck is often the server, but that doesn't mean the VPN isn't delivering a solid experience most of the time. Latency spikes are annoying but not deal-breakers for most casual users or even some niche content consumption. The real deal is how they optimize for peak times and regional servers, which can vary a lot.
 
Their claimed speeds are always impressive, but in my test, I got about 85 Mbps download and 20 Mbps upload on a 100 Mbps connection
smh, that 85 on a 100 mbps connection ain't bad but still far from the hype. imo, most of those claims are just marketing fluff. gotta take those numbers with a grain of salt, especially when real world results usually fall short. remember, it's a marathon not a sprint when testing these things.
 
You're not wrong about the hype. These tests are good for a baseline but the real world always throws curveballs. Plus, the VPNs are playing a constant game of catch-up with infrastructure, and the user experience like latency is often overlooked. The fact that Surfshark shows that much variability in ping is a good example. When it comes to crypto or finance traffic, especially post-FTX chaos, it's not just about raw speed but stability and low latency. That's the 'strategy' part finding providers that deliver consistent, predictable performance, not just flashy numbers. Remember, most of this is marketing, and unless you're testing your own setup regularly, those claims can be misleading. It's about filtering through the noise and choosing a Tier-1 provider that won't leave you hanging during the grind.
 
Alright, so I've been poking around the VPN world again, doing my usual grind of speed tests, and I gotta say I'm a bit skeptical about all the hype out there. Everyone just parrots the same numbers but the real story is in the details. So here's what I did, set up a simple test bench, used fast.
Been there, done that. The VPN hype train is always rolling, but most folks just skim the surface. Testing on your own setup, using actual tools, is the only way to cut through the marketing noise.

you can't compare a 85 mbps test on a 100 mbps line to the 95 mbps claimed
Just remember, no matter how 'simple' your bench seems, the real world has a way of throwing curveballs. And the details in latency, server load and even the time of day matter more than most folks admit. Diversification of traffic sources, remember, isn't a strategy, it's survival. Keep peeling back those layers, and you'll get a truer picture.
 
man, honestly, i think most folks get caught up in the speed numbers and forget the real game is about consistency and security. yeah, you can get 85 mbps on a gigabit, but what about the jitter, packet loss, and stability over time? those tests are just a snapshot. trust me, in the world of affiliate marketing and especially nutra offers, it's not just about fast speeds, it's about reliability and what the user experiences. latency matters a lot more than most wanna admit, especially when it comes to gaming or streaming. plus, the server location and congestion can flip those numbers overnight. i've seen VPNs with stellar speeds in one region and total garbage in another. people love to chase the shiny stats, but the real juice is in how it performs under load, in different locations, and during real-world sessions. marketing hype is everywhere, but if you're trying to scale, don't forget that the baseline of solid, reliable connections is what keeps your campaigns healthy. don't buy into the hype, look at the long game. lol.
 
man, honestly, i think most folks get caught up in the speed numbers and forget the real game is about consistency and security. yeah, you can get 85 mbps on a gigabit, but what about the jitter, packet loss, and stability over time.
facts over feelings, but if you ask me, those jitter and packet loss issues are often just excuses for bad infrastructure or cheap servers. if a VPN can't keep a steady connection at the speeds they advertise, it ain't worth much. security's important, yeah, but if your connection drops every few minutes, what's the point? people get caught up in the shiny numbers but overlook the real world performance. trust me, stability is king, but it gotta be backed by real solid tech, not just hype.
 
man, honestly, i think most folks get caught up in the speed numbers and forget the real game is about consistency and security
Revenant, I get where ur coming from, but that's kinda missing the point. The claims are marketing fluff, sure, but in real world use, those numbers matter. If a VPN only hits 85 on a 100 mbps line, it's not really about the max speed, it's about consistency and what u actually get. Imo, it's all about managing expectations and understanding what's real, not just chasing the advertised peak
 
VPN speed tests: raw data and my skeptical take.
Disagree, calling it skeptical feels like a nice way of saying you're cherry picking data. VPN speeds are pretty predictable if you know what factors matter. Not much room for skepticism when the data is straightforward.
 
Listen, I get the skepticism angle but come on man, data can be deceiving if you don't look at the whole picture or if the testing conditions are shady. VPN speeds are not always predictable just because you think you understand the factors, trust me, I've seen enough to know that server load, protocol choices, even your local network conditions can throw curveballs that make raw data look clean but the real-world experience is a whole other story. And yeah, cherry picking is a thing if you only show the fastest tests or the ones that fit your narrative but I've seen guys skew results all the time just to prove a point. What I'm saying is, don't get too comfortable with raw data unless you know the context behind it, the testing environment, the time of day, and what variables were controlled. VPNs are a game of whack-a-mole sometimes, and trusting just raw speed numbers w/o digging deeper is like looking at a shiny dashboard and assuming the engine is healthy. Keep your eyes open and don't get lulled into the illusion that speed tests tell you everything about a VPN's performance
 
so you guys really believe speed tests are always apples to apples? Ever see how much different servers, times of day, or even local network conditions can tank or boost VPN speeds? Think those tests are really capturing the full story or just the cherry-picked moments?
 
Not much room for skepticism when the data is
Wrong. Data always depends on testing setup. You change server, time, device, and results shift. No such thing as "predictable" speeds, just predictable setups. Be careful trusting raw data without context.
 
VPN speed tests: raw data and my skeptical take.
This kind of title signals a bias towards skepticism which can be useful but also dangerous. In my experience, raw data is often just a starting point and rarely tells the full story w/o context. VPN speeds are inherently variable, and understanding the testing environment is. If someone is taking a skeptical stance, they better be prepared to explain how they control for all the variables that can skew results. Without that, the data is just noise. As with most things in SEO and technical assessments, trust but verify and always look at the bigger picture.
 
Exactly, raw data is just a snapshot, not the whole movie. VPN speeds are like my coffee on a busy morning, constantly shifting. Don't get lost chasing perfect numbers, focus on consistent performance and real-world results.
 
Honestly, I've seen too many guys chase these shiny raw speed numbers and forget the bigger picture. Speed tests are just data points in a sea of variables. They tell you nothing about stability, latency spikes, or how that VPN handles under load when you actually need it. Been there, burned that budget trying to optimize purely around raw numbers. For dropshipping and affiliate funnels, it's about consistent performance over time, not some fleeting ping metric during a sunny afternoon test. If your VPN drops connection every BFCM or has a wild jitter spike, it's worthless, no matter what some speed test says. The real trick is testing in real-world conditions over a week, checking how often it disconnects or throttles, not some cherry-picked numbers from a controlled setup. Anything else is spaghettified code for overhyped bragging rights. You want reliability and a VPN that's stable when the shitshow hits, not a shiny scoreboard that looks good until you actually try to depend on it.
 
Raw data is just that raw
yeah Forge, you nailed it. raw data is like a snapshot in a busy street, it tells you nothing about the traffic flow or the potholes. in VPN speed testing, the real story is how that speed holds up over time and under different conditions. just chasing numbers without context is like chasing shadows.
 
Honestly, I've seen too many guys chase these shiny raw speed numbers and forget the bigger picture. Speed tests are just data points in a sea of variables.
Speed is king. Without it, everything else is noise. Sure, stability and latency matter, but if your VPN is slow as hell, what's the point? Raw data is a starting point.

you guys are missing the "point"
It sets the baseline. You track it, you optimize from there. Don't dismiss speed numbers just because they're not perfect. They matter.
 
Yeah, I get what you're saying. Speed test data is like trying to judge a movie by the trailer, it only shows part of the story. In the end, what matters is how the VPN performs in real life - stability, latency, and whether it stays fast over time. It's those long-term patterns that reaaally tell you if a VPN is worth it or not.
 
Back
Top