Ideas
Here we go again, EVERY match today, kicked before the match ends. I never thought I'd say it, but BF2042 was pretty sad, but at least it's playable at this point. EA fix your shizzle.
BF6 is completely unplayable at this point. I propose renaming Javelin Anti-Cheat to Javelin Anti-Play. I'm just glad I haven't used any 'real time' xp boosters on this since the problem started. Can you imagine launching a 30 minute booster to get kicked 5 or 10 minutes into a match and then having to wait another 20 or so until your NIC recovers.... Wasted XP booster.
You know what would be nice, at least some kind of acknowledgement that there is a problem and it's being worked on. This is all over the internet at this point.
just curious, as I don't have this issue, but want to see how my system is, what are you using to monitor your throughput? The in-game tools or something outside of the game?
- ToadKillerDog63 months agoSeasoned Rookie
A simple way on both Win 10 and 11 is to check both before and after you get kicked from the game.
Before starting your game, right click on your network icon in the system tray.
Network and Internet settings > Select Ethernet (Win 11, something similar for Win 10)
For Win 11 you'll see your aggregated settings for the NIC and its rx/tx rate.
Once you get kicked, immediate exit the game and perform the same check. You'll see what the rate is after the kick.
On Win 10, there's another link in the above you'll need to click to get that info.
As stated, for the above, NIC gets kicked down to 10 or 100 Mbps. Once it's at 100 I can play for a while.
This is definitely related to BF6/JAC. If you stay out of the game long enough, you can literally watch your NIC reset to gigabit after several minutes.
You can also view your port/NIC speed in your router if you know where to look. Same deal, you can see it start out at gigabit, drop to 10 or 100, and after some time out of the game, renegotiate back to gigabit.
If you happen to have the right networking equipment, you can watch this happen in real time via syslog logging from the switch to your syslog collector.