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Zgłoś problem z tłumaczeniem
well, based on that video, I can tell you what, sometimes your network is just completely unable to send packets… on that video it couldn't send 56 packets (almost a second) in a row
Optic fiber internet doesn't have to do anything with this, such issues happen there too, it's just that the network is unstable. I'm sorry, I don't have a lot of information to work with, so I'll have to ask you a few questions:
1. Is it always almost a second? Something close to 64 unsent ticks, because if it is, it could be a software issue somewhere
2. Try seeing if it's only in the game or it also happens here: https://packetlosstest.com/ Choose that server which is closest to the one you're getting thrown onto when playing CS2, change Frequency to 64 pings per second, and duration to 1-2 minutes and see if packet loss is 0.0% there or it's more than 0% too
3. Do you have a different ISP for your phone network? You could try playing using your phone as a modem (USB modem/hosted Wi-Fi hotspot) and see if those upload packet losses happen like that too: that bypasses possible problems with your home Internet ISP and with your home router
4. (too much to bother with) If you feel like it could be your router causing you issues you can try bypassing your router entirely by plugging the Ethernet cable from your ISP directly into your computer, but that usually requires you to wait for 15 minutes for your Internet connection to be restored (since your PC's MAC address is different), and then another 15 minutes when switching back to the router.
5. (too much to bother with) It could be some other program on your Windows installation being misconfigured, especially if (1) is true, and as a result causing such issues, in which case I'd suggest installing another Windows installation alongside your current one to see if it happens there or not.
By asking these I just want to narrow down the range of components which could potentially cause the issue. Honestly it can be as dumb as an Ethernet cable being loosely plugged somewhere, or an Ethernet socket being loose itself from age, or, if you're using Wi-Fi, it could be a buggy driver version.
If it's not comfortable to talk about it here you can add me and I'll post the solution here for potential other people if we find one :D
https://youtu.be/4gsvtPm07-E
i looked everywhere on internet and i have tried hundreds of possible solutions but none have helped a bit, the only thing i didnt try and its not possible for me to do is getting a optical fiber ethernet.