Anyone who’s had a screen freeze in the middle of a match or watched a stream buffer during a critical moment in online gameplay knows the frustration of unreliable WiFi. In gaming and streaming, milliseconds matter. Traditional home networks weren’t designed with that kind of demand in mind.
Most households still rely on a single router to push a signal through walls and floors. That works fine when you’re nearby, but a setup in the basement or an upstairs room can mean lag, buffering or even dropped connections. Add in the strain of multiple devices — phones, tablets, smart TVs, consoles — and the system starts to show its limits.








