- Aug 25, 2004
- 314
- 1
- 81
Hello folks,
I have been playing WoW since last July and I have not had too many problems with latency, however; in the past two to three weeks the latency has been so bad that I cannot play the game. For those of you who play the game, you know there is a status bar which is green for good latency and red for bad latency. The symptoms are always the same. I start off with latency below 200 and over about 10 to 20 minutes the latency climbs until it is well into the thousands, ie 3,000, 4,000, etc. It has gone as high as 9000 and then disconnected.
I can't be positive but it seems like when I go into battlegrounds or I am in an instance with several other players it tends to get worse. I can shut the game down and wait 5 or 10 minutes and then start it back up with the same result. I have tried WoW technical support and they told me to update my video and sound card drivers. Yawn.
The specs on the PC that I am using are:
P4 3Ghz with over 1GB of Ram
64MB ATI Radeon 9000 Video Card
Windows XP
Dell Notebook
McAfee Firewall
Netfear Router with firewall
I have opened all the ports on both the Netgear via port forwarding and also on the McAfee firewall. I have set the pc up in a DMZ so that I bypass the Netgear router. I also have the PC set up with a static IP so that the Netgear knows what IP address to forward ports to. I have updated all of the drivers per WoW tech support. I tried disabling the McAfee firewall and just using the Netgear hardware firewall. Regardless of what I have tried, I get the exact same result.
Last night I decided to run a speed test shortly after I logged off of WoW to see what my bandwidth was. The speed test registered me at less than dial up. I am using DSL which is supposedly 1.5 x 256 best effort. I know WoW does not need that much bandwidth and this is more of a response time issue but the test made me wonder if a rogue application was running in the background. I checked ctr-alt-del but I did not see any processes that looked unusual. I did see that WoW causes the PC to run at 100% but that is normal from past experience.
I also have WoW on a different computer with the following spec:
P4 1.3 gHz with 768Kb of Ram
128MB Video Card (Can't remember model NVIDIA maybe)
Windows XP
Dell Desktop
McAfee Firewall
Netgear Router
The game seems to run decently on the above PC. The latency stays below 300 which is still green. One difference between the two set-ups is the notebook has a newer version of McAfee. Another point of interest is that I did not configure the Netgear router to port forward to the desktop and it still worked ok.
After all the fussing with the notebook, I am now fairly convinced that there is some kind of rogue application running in the background that I can't identify. It might even be Blizzard running their Warden program which helps stop cheaters. My questions are:
1. Do you agree with my assessment?
2. How do I identify the rogue application?
3. How do I get rid of the appliaction?
4. Are there any "safe" programs which can tell me if I am connecting to other pcs or if any pcs are connecting to me behind the scenes?
5. What else could it be?
Many thanks for any advice, Bill
I have been playing WoW since last July and I have not had too many problems with latency, however; in the past two to three weeks the latency has been so bad that I cannot play the game. For those of you who play the game, you know there is a status bar which is green for good latency and red for bad latency. The symptoms are always the same. I start off with latency below 200 and over about 10 to 20 minutes the latency climbs until it is well into the thousands, ie 3,000, 4,000, etc. It has gone as high as 9000 and then disconnected.
I can't be positive but it seems like when I go into battlegrounds or I am in an instance with several other players it tends to get worse. I can shut the game down and wait 5 or 10 minutes and then start it back up with the same result. I have tried WoW technical support and they told me to update my video and sound card drivers. Yawn.
The specs on the PC that I am using are:
P4 3Ghz with over 1GB of Ram
64MB ATI Radeon 9000 Video Card
Windows XP
Dell Notebook
McAfee Firewall
Netfear Router with firewall
I have opened all the ports on both the Netgear via port forwarding and also on the McAfee firewall. I have set the pc up in a DMZ so that I bypass the Netgear router. I also have the PC set up with a static IP so that the Netgear knows what IP address to forward ports to. I have updated all of the drivers per WoW tech support. I tried disabling the McAfee firewall and just using the Netgear hardware firewall. Regardless of what I have tried, I get the exact same result.
Last night I decided to run a speed test shortly after I logged off of WoW to see what my bandwidth was. The speed test registered me at less than dial up. I am using DSL which is supposedly 1.5 x 256 best effort. I know WoW does not need that much bandwidth and this is more of a response time issue but the test made me wonder if a rogue application was running in the background. I checked ctr-alt-del but I did not see any processes that looked unusual. I did see that WoW causes the PC to run at 100% but that is normal from past experience.
I also have WoW on a different computer with the following spec:
P4 1.3 gHz with 768Kb of Ram
128MB Video Card (Can't remember model NVIDIA maybe)
Windows XP
Dell Desktop
McAfee Firewall
Netgear Router
The game seems to run decently on the above PC. The latency stays below 300 which is still green. One difference between the two set-ups is the notebook has a newer version of McAfee. Another point of interest is that I did not configure the Netgear router to port forward to the desktop and it still worked ok.
After all the fussing with the notebook, I am now fairly convinced that there is some kind of rogue application running in the background that I can't identify. It might even be Blizzard running their Warden program which helps stop cheaters. My questions are:
1. Do you agree with my assessment?
2. How do I identify the rogue application?
3. How do I get rid of the appliaction?
4. Are there any "safe" programs which can tell me if I am connecting to other pcs or if any pcs are connecting to me behind the scenes?
5. What else could it be?
Many thanks for any advice, Bill
