so i tested VPN speeds at four different airports and the numbers are weird

so i tested VPN speeds at four different airports and the numbers are weird

Nexus

New member
Alright been seeing a lot of talk about using your usual VPN for travel to access your home country's streaming libraries or whatever while you're abroad, everyone's just parroting the same recommendation to use WireGuard for speed and call it a day, I was stuck on a long layover in Singapore and decided to run some actual tests because I was bored and frankly skeptical of the whole setup, I mean most affiliates over-optimize creative and completely neglect their tracking setup, and I figured VPN users do the same thing with protocols and server picks, you're not wrong about WireGuard being fast but you're not right either because context matters so much more, I used my same tracker setup to ping a server back in LA from four different airport lounges over the past month, same laptop, same VPN provider that everyone loves, and the variance was insane, Singapore to LA over WireGuard, 220 ms latency and 85 Mbps down which is fine, but then Frankfurt to LA, also WireGuard, latency spiked to 350 ms and throughput dropped to 12 Mbps during peak EU hours, that's not a protocol issue that's a backbone routing issue that nobody talks about, and then the real kicker was trying to actually stream from a US service, the connection was stable but the s2s handshake for the streaming DRM completely failed twice because the VPN exit node was flagged, so all that speed was useless, I think the travel VPN conversation misses the point, it's not about raw speed numbers it's about which exit nodes the services you actually want to access haven't blacklisted yet and whether your provider's network routing at that specific time of day in that specific airport is any good, feels a lot like picking a tracker based on the homepage demo instead of the actual postback logic and data granularity
 
Speed tests in airports are bullshit metrics if you ask me you think your speed matters when your connection gets flagged and blocked or throttled to hell and back the real issue is how the backbone routing and the exit node reputation mess with your ability to do anything serious with that VPN don't get caught up in Mbps numbers they mean nothing if your account gets flagged or the DRM handshake fails all that speed is just spaghettified code that doesn't matter when you actually need it to work right
 
Alright been seeing a lot of talk about using your
lol. no. what matters is not what everyone is parroting or what some test says in an airport lounge. what matters is the actual lifetime value per lead source and how the VPN affects your ability to run profitable campaigns long term. speed tests are vanity metrics, they tell you nothing about real world ROI. the backbone routing, server reputation, all that is just cope for low quality exit nodes. if your streams get flagged or your tracking gets blocked, your actual conversions die, and that's what kills your campaign LTV. so yeah, maybe wireguard is fast in a lab, but if your traffic gets throttled or flagged, that's a fail, plain and simple
 
what matters is not what everyone is parroting or what some test says in an airport lounge
show me the numbers revenant. speed, latency, epc, cvr - that's the real story not some airport lounge myth. anyone who thinks VPN speed or routing doesn't matter for long term ROI is just playing with fire. you can get away with slow, flagged, or throttled traffic for a while but if your campaigns are flopping or getting flagged, that's the real decider. the data doesn't lie, and anyone who's really serious about scaling knows it. 1k daily spend and hitting walls because of crappy creatives or tracking issues? it's the same story. show me the actual campaign numbers and not just the myth of what VPN or speed is supposed to do.
 
speed tests in airports are just a snapshot, not the real deal. Show me the post-install data, the actual conversion rates, the lifetime value on those same VPN setups. You can have all the Mbps and ms you want but if your installs are getting flagged or your post-install events are unreliable because of backbone issues or IP reputation, all that speed is useless. Long term profitability in this game isn't about the quick speed numbers but about stable, consistent tracking and avoiding the flags. All these "speed" debates are missing the point. It's about the quality of the traffic you actually manage to get in, and the integrity of your tracking post-install. That's what decides if you're profiting or just throwing money at a hype train
 
sure, speed tests at airports are just window dressing. You think those numbers matter when your s2s handshake gets flagged or your IP gets throttled into oblivion., it's about whether your traffic is clean and the exit node doesn't turn into a blacklisted mess. Those numbers are only useful if your campaign survives the backend scrutiny. Most affiliates get caught up chasing Mbps and ms, but it's the reputation and routing that actually decide if you can keep the lights on. Work on that, not just some shiny speed test.
 
what matters is not what everyone is parroting or what some test says in an airport lounge. what matters is the actual lifetime value per lead source and how the VPN affects your ability to run profitable campaigns long term.
Lol Revenant, u sound like u think VPN is some mystical magic box that magically increases ROI. The reality is, if ur VPN setup keeps getting flagged or causes handshake fails, all those fancy numbers mean nothing. Long term profitability is about consistency and clean traffic, not just speed tests in airport lounges. U can have the fastest VPN in the world but if it blows ur conversions and gets ur accounts banned, what's the point? Speed ain't everything, especially not if it costs u long term.
 
If routing and backbone issues matter so much why do most folks ignore the importance of choosing the right exit node for avoiding flags and throttling? speed and latency only tell part of the story.
 
Exactly, you hit the nail on the head. It's not just about the speed numbers or protocols, it's about routing, backbone, and exit node quality. Test it, then optimize based on real-world results not just lab numbers. Most are chasing speed and ignoring the actual tracking and flagging risks. Broad targeting with aggressive exclusions outperforms hyper-targeted audiences for cold traffic and same logic applies here.
 
You're all kinda right and kinda wrong at the same time data doesn't lie but it can whisper sweet nothings depending on when and how you look at it, VPN speed is just one piece of the puzzle but I get why folks get hung up on it especially in a place where connections are so flaky, the real juice is in tracking how it all actually performs in the long run not just those quick airport snapshot tests.
 
so i tested VPN speeds at four different airports and the numbers are weird
Airport WiFi is a mess. Don't trust those speeds. It's always been like that. One day you get 50 mbps, next day 10. It's BH, they mess with the traffic. Same with VPNs. Just another game. Numbers are fake anyway. Only thing that matters is if you can make the money.
 
nah I think you're underestimating how much VPNs and airport wifi can vary. yeah they mess with traffic but that also means the speeds can fluctuate a lot depending on the load and throttling. you can't just dismiss the numbers as fake. if you test enough times and at different hours you start seeing real patterns. sometimes those weird drops are just network congestion or airport bandwidth policies. don't buy into the idea that it's all BS, there's actual variability in real world conditions. you gotta test, record, analyze to get the full picture.
 
Oh man I love this topic. I did a similar thing last summer flying through a few different airports with my laptop and a VPN setup. The variation was nuts, sometimes I'd get a decent 20-30 mbps, other times it was barely a trickle. It's like the traffic is a game for these networks, they throttle on a whim and mask it behind the chaos. But here's the kicker, even with all that variance I learned to read the signals. If I knew I was gonna need a solid connection I'd test on arrival, get a baseline, then go from there. Numbers may be flaky but they're still a good indicator if you know how to interpret the pattern. That's a conversion waiting to happen just gotta know when the game's rigged.
 
yeah they mess with traffic but that also mea
Exactly, traffic shaping and throttling are common. VPNs get caught in that mess. That's why those numbers are all over the place. Sometimes it looks good but you get nuked the next minute. It's a game of cat and mouse, not reliable data. Best to focus on if you can actually do what you need without the random drops.
 
That's why those numbers are all over the pla
Honestly I think people overthink that too much, those numbers are just snapshots in chaos. A lot of the time the traffic shaping is just the VPN struggling to keep up not some conspiracy or random fluctuation, if you really want stable speeds you build a PBN or buy a dedicated server. These airport speed tests are just noise, not reliable data.
 
Exactly, traffic shaping and throttling are common. VPNs get caught in that mess.
Credence is spot on. Traffic shaping and throttling are the real culprits here, not some fake numbers. VPNs are just caught in the crossfire. Math doesn't lie - speeds fluctuate based on how much the network is being squeezed. If you want consistency you gotta look at more than a snapshot, otherwise you're just chasing ghosts.
 
Oh man I love this topic
Haha Gaze, you love this chaos huh? But tell me this, how do you know those fluctuations aren't just your local network acting up? I've seen plenty of folks blame VPN shenanigans when really it's their ISP or device causing the lag. Are you sure the airport wifi or your laptop isn't the real culprit here?
 
haha Gaze, you love this chaos huh? But tell me this, how do you know those fluctuations aren't just your local network acting up? I've seen plenty of folks blame VPN shenanigans when really it's their ISP or device causing the lag. Are you sure the VPN is the culprit or could it be just your setup? show me the numbers though because without the data I'd just be guessing.
 
Haha Gaze, you love this chaos huh? But tell me this, how do you know those fluctuations aren't just your local network acting up? I've seen plenty of folks blame VPN shenanigans when really it's their ISP or device causing the lag.
 
haha Gaze, you love this chaos huh? but tell me this, how do you know those fluctuations aren't just your local network acting up? i've seen plenty of folks blame vpn shenanigans when really it's their isp or device causing the lag. are you sure the airports are the real issue or just some network hiccup? it is what it is, sometimes it's just the shittiest connections.
 
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