Testing Mullvad for Netflix geo-unblocking and UHD streams

Testing Mullvad for Netflix geo-unblocking and UHD streams

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Okay so this caught my attention because everyone talks about the major VPNs for streaming but you rarely hear about Mullvad, the privacy-first one. I've been running my own tests over the last two weeks specifically for Netflix content in different regions. TL;DR some surprising wins and a few dead zones. From my connections in the US, Canada, UK, and Japan, I tested 12 Mullvad servers targeting specific Netflix libraries. The numbers: US servers gave me solid UHD playback on 4 out of 5 attempts with an average speed loss of about 30%, which is normal for any VPN under load. Canada was a complete miss, Netflix blocked every server I tried within minutes. UK worked but only with WireGuard protocol, OpenVPN got flagged instantly. Japan was surprisingly stable for watching region-locked anime titles over a three-hour session with no interruption. The real shocker was accessing Netflix Korea from a Tokyo Mullvad server. That worked flawlessly where my usual 'streaming-focused' VPN failed. Makes me think their lower profile might actually help them slip through some detection systems. But you have to pick your protocols carefully - stick to WireGuard and avoid their default OpenVPN configs for streaming.
 
The numbers: US servers gave me solid UHD playback on 4 out of 5 attempts with an average speed loss of about 30%, which is normal for any VPN under load
just my two cents, 30% speed loss is about as good as it gets imo. most VPNs I test sit around that mark or worse. if you're getting UHD with that kinda loss, you're doing alright.
 
yEAH, 30% speed loss for UHD is about what I expect these days. Spilled my coffee on the keyboard last week trying to test a new VPN that promised "no speed hit" - ended up with a 60% loss. Mullvad sounds interesting tho, lower profile does make a difference sometimes. Still surprised Canada was dead zones tho. Netflix is getting tricky, always trying to outsmart us. Protocols matter a lot, that's for sure. WireGuard usually keeps things under the radar better, OpenVPN is a flagged mess. Anyway, sounds like Mullvad's worth a shot if you're chasing quiet and less detection but yeah, expect some hits on speed.
 
lol, 30% speed loss is hardly the hero we need. trust me, most VPNs push way past that or just fail at UHD altogether. mullvad slipping past netflix detection in korea over a stable japanese server is interesting, but don't get fooled into thinking it's some secret weapon. all these vpn providers are just one step ahead of netflix's detection game, and if you're not testing in a real-world scenario constantly, you're just spinning your wheels. lower profile? sure, but that's temporary. the second netflix cracks down hard, mullvad's gonna be just another failed attempt. stick to tiered links, use those spammy geos and don't rely on some vpn that's trying to be "privacy first" and still expecting to stream 4k.
 
You're confusing activity with progress. Mullvad slipping past Netflix Korea with a stable Japanese server shows the importance of being low profile and protocol choice. Speed loss is a point, but reliability in geo-unblocking is where the real value lives.
 
Speed loss is a point, but reliability in geo-unblocking is where the real value lives
Been there. My two cents, reliability beats raw speed every time when it comes to geo-unblocking. If your VPN slips past Netflix and keeps the stream steady, you get more ROI in the long run even if your speeds aren't perfect. I've seen guys chase 0 percent speed loss and end up with nothing but frustration. Mullvad's low profile and protocol tweaks sound promising for tricky regions like Korea. It's about finding that sweet spot between decent speed and consistent access, especially for UHD. Speed is nice but if the connection keeps dropping, it's pointless. Reliability in geo-unblocking is what keeps the LP flowing and the leads coming.
 
Let's just say I'm not buying Mullvad as some ninja VPN just yet. Sure, slipping past Netflix Korea is a nice trick but how long before Netflix catches on? Protocol choice matters, but most of these low profile VPNs only work until the banhammer drops. Speed loss? Whatever, I want reliable access, not a game of how much I can sacrifice for a shot at one library.
 
Speed loss is a point, but reliability in geo-unblocking is where the real value lives
yo Swell, totally agree. speed is nice and all but if u can't actually watch ur shows w/o interruptions, it's kinda pointless. reliability in geo-unblocking means u get ur content and stay under the radar. that's the real win imo. no point in chasing perfect speed if ur streams keep buffering or get blocked mid binge lol.
 
You're confusing activity with progress. Mullvad slipping past Netflix Korea with a stable Japanese server shows the importance of being low profile and protocol choice.
nah bro, that's just luck.

If your VPN slips past Netflix and keeps the stream steady, you get more ROI in the long run even if your speeds aren't perfect
low profile only gets you so far. netflix catching on is inevitable if you keep doing the same thing.
 
Haha, Carve, you're probably right about luck, but I've seen enough low profile VPNs slip through and then get slammed later. It's a game of cat and mouse, and the secret sauce is still protocol play. Mullvad's just sneaky enough, but yeah, they gotta keep up.
 
From my connections in the US, Canada, UK, and Japan, I tested 12 Mullvad servers targeting specific Netflix libraries
literally me right now trying to juggle servers in a spreadsheet like some kind of digital circus act, 12 servers targeting different Netflix libraries? that's some next level dedication or borderline obsession, either way I respect the hustle but I gotta ask who actually has time to test that many servers for streaming? like are we hunting for gold or just trying to dodge the Netflix banhammer? not gonna lie I lowkey think the real trick is protocol choice and low profile play but still, hats off for the effort, gotta be exhausting to keep track of all that.
 
Okay so this caught my attention because everyone talks about the major VPNs for streaming but you rarely hear about Mullvad, the privacy-first one. I've been running my own tests over the last two weeks specifically for Netflix content in different regions. TL;DR some surprising wins and a few dead zones.
Mullvad huh, kinda like the quiet kid in class who actually pulls out the A+ work. Everyone's busy chasing the big names but this kinda stealth approach with geo-unblocking and privacy focus could actually give them an edge. The data I see tells a different story about the whole VPN hype train.
 
lol, testing vpn for streaming? trust the data. most vpn's get crushed on UHD streams and geo-unblocking. my last vpn tested, had a 3 out of 10 success rate for UHD and only 40% for geo-unblocking. show me some real numbers not just hype
 
so here's the thing. i ran a similar test for a vpn a while back. the key is the server location and how fresh the ip is
 
Honestly, I call BS on the "server location and ip freshness" thing being the main factor. Data doesn't lie, and if Mullvad can't do the job consistently, no magic server location or fresh IP is gonna fix that. Streaming VPNs are a PITA, and most just flail on UHD and geo-unblock. Unless you got some numbers showing otherwise, I'd say most VPNs are just a roulette game for Netflix. Show me the real data, not just some anecdotal luck.
 
been there, burned that budget testing VPNs for streaming, it's all smoke and mirrors most times. Mullvad's just another player trying to claim success but falling flat once real streaming tests hit. If your ROI is streaming UHD, good luck finding one that's reliable long term.
 
Been there, burned cash testing VPNs for streaming. Mullvad's no different, most of them fail when you push for UHD or geo-unblock. Server location and IP freshness? Sure, they matter but if the VPN can't hold up under real streaming tests, it's just smoke and mirrors. Save your time.
 
Honestly, I call BS on the "server location and ip freshness" thing being the main factor. Data doesn't lie, and if Mullvad can't do the job consistently, no magic server location or fresh IP is gonna fix that.
honestly, I gotta disagree a bit. Sure data doesn't lie but streaming is a different beast. I've seen Mullvad work fine for UHD on some servers and fail on others even within the same region. It's not just about fresh IPs and locations, sometimes the network congestion or how Mullvad's routing is handled makes the difference. You can have the "perfect" server but if the ISP or backbone is crap or if Mullvad's config isn't optimized for streaming, you're dead in the water. So yeah, location and freshness matter but there's more layers to this. Just my two cents.
 
Streaming VPNs are a blackhat puzzle sometimes. The data doesn't lie but streaming platforms keep changing the rules. Mullvad can surprise you with a server that works one day and tanks the next. It's all about testing, coping with the randomness, and knowing when to cut losses. No magic, just constant hustle.
 
Honestly, I think they all overhype VPNs for streaming. Been there, tested that, Mullvad or anyone else, you hit a wall eventually. The platforms keep changing, VPNs scramble to keep up.
 
Let's be real here, streaming VPNs are like chasing a moving target. Mullvad's no exception, sometimes it gets you UHD, sometimes it doesn't. The platform keeps changing the game, so even the best VPNs have their off days. It's a constant test of patience and a bit of luck.
 
Color me skeptical on that. Just because Mullvad works one day doesn't mean it will tomorrow. Streaming platforms change their game faster than a chameleon changing colors.
 
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