With spooky season fast approaching, there’s only one thing that strikes fear in me as a PC gamer—creaky internet. I could tell you just how long it took to download *Baldur’s Gate 3* over my dubious internet connection recently, but I fear your heart couldn’t take it.
Many of the standard routers given out by ISPs are usually fine for the average internet-enjoyer. However, as someone frequently downloading beefy game files at a snail’s pace with my current setup, perhaps this is another avenue where I should up my hardware game.
The TP-Link Archer AXE75 router makes that easy for a number of reasons, but chiefly because you can pick it up for $120 on Amazon right now. Ian scored the router 81% in his TP-Link Archer AXE75 review last year, and it’s one of our top picks for the best gaming router—for good reason.
Setting aside its overengineered, mothership-like look—or what a pain that lattice design will be to dust—this router has a lot going for it. As a Wi-Fi 6E router, the TP-Link Archer AXE75 dips a toe into the 6 GHz band and, as a result, can offer speeds of up to 2402 Mbps.
But that advertised speed comes with a few caveats, of course.
Let me be clear about one thing for a start: a new router isn’t guaranteed to fix all of your internet woes. For another, the TP-Link Archer AXE75’s WAN port caps out at 1 Gbps. Internet speeds can also be affected by a number of other factors, from your local infrastructure to the layout of your house.
For instance, higher frequencies have a harder time passing through walls, so the TP-Link Archer AXE75’s 6 GHz band is better suited to pushing out big downloads to, say, a gaming PC in the same room as the router.
The same can be said for newer routers offering Wi-Fi 7 tech and beyond. However, routers offering those higher frequencies and advertised speeds are bound to be more expensive than the TP-Link Archer AXE75. The Wi-Fi 6E tech here is still more than serviceable.
You can also set up separate 5 GHz and 2.4 GHz networks for your less data-hungry devices. This allows your phones, tablets, or Internet of Things devices to have their fill without being massively throttled by a big game download hogging all the bandwidth on the same frequency.
Managing multiple networks of different internet frequency bands might prove a headache for some. You can, of course, keep all of those bands bundled together in the same network if you so choose, leaving it up to the router and your client devices to work out which frequency is best.
Still, three networks means you’re going to need to come up with three fun names, right? I’m thinking:
– **The Gamer Zone** for the 6 GHz band
– **Second Screen Scene** for the 5 GHz spectrum
– **Scrub Land** for the 2.4 GHz network
If you’re looking to improve your gaming downloads and overall internet experience without breaking the bank, the TP-Link Archer AXE75 is definitely worth a look this spooky season.
https://www.pcgamer.com/hardware/standard-router-no-longer-cutting-it-our-favourite-wi-fi-6e-box-is-now-only-usd120/