Zodiarkslayer wrote: »Remember, latency is not bandwidth! Latency is not about how big your hammer is, but how often you can swing it. 😉
If you have latency issues, there are two possible explanations.
One. Your provider reroutes your signal for some reason. And in the interim you loose connection to ESO servers.
Two. Some operations on your PC cause your network connection to "overload" with too many handles that have too many different servers as targets. You definitely have to analyse and monitor your outgoing traffic. The simplest way is to open your windows taskmanager while playing and sort for "network" while looking at your processes tab. Every process except ESO should have 0 MBit/s.
If not, that is where you should start looking.
A friend of mine told me a couple months ago that his PC got used for crypto mining, without him noticing. Only after he upgraded his Anti-Virus and Security Suite he got alerted and could solve his network and CPU issues.
Apparently some free program that he downloaded had a backdoor and allowed for this.
Internet is wild these days.

You can press Win+R, enter "cmd" and then type either tracert 198.20.200.1 (NA) or tracert 159.100.230.1 (EU) in the command prompt, to get a detailed list of the route your connection takes to ZOS servers.
Somewhere along the way should be a big jump. If it is early, before it even connects to your ISP, it's somewhere in your home (broken cable, overloaded wifi), otherwise you can send the data to ZOS and your ISP as either side can look into the routing.
If you post the result here, please remove the IP from the hops before your ISP.
Sounds like a local machine issue. First thing you're going to want to check is what is running on your machine and what its network traffic looks like. You're going to have start looking for free and safe tools to diagnose the issue. Then you'll need to run down a check list of things such as what apps are running and under what permissions as well as what kind of data they are sending and receiving over the network.
... Or you could nuke from orbit and just reformat and reinstall your OS and software. Not always the best option but sometimes it's the only way to be sure.
DestroyerPewnack wrote: »I don't know which numbers I'm supposed to cover, so I won't share a screenshot, but I can tell you that the biggest two numbers I got were from something called akamaitechnologies, and the from same IP address before the hops. Both of those had over 200 ms, while everything else was below 10 ms. Does that give you any clues about what might be wrong? :c
Akamai is basically ZOS' internet provider. The last IP address is the game server.
Seems like the issue is your ISP's route to the Akamai network. That can be anything from defective hardware to security measures running amok. Usually connection issues at that level are solved "automatically", but if it takes more than a few days, definitely open a CS ticket describing your problem and add the tracert result.
A gaming VPN like Exitlag should help until its resolved, but in the end proper internet routing is what you pay your ISP for.
Sounds like a local issue. Could be your rig, could be your router. Serious question: Have you tried turning it off and on again?
Sounds like a local issue. Could be your rig, could be your router. Serious question: Have you tried turning it off and on again?
Well, they did say that other family members in the house aren't having an issue. So I'm still leaning toward rig. But checking out the ping routing and using something like ExitLag would certainly be a first choice to see if there isn't something weird happening outside the house, first.