Visual Ping

Visualize latency and response times at a glance.

Click "Start ping" to measure latency to the target with 10 consecutive attempts.

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How to use visual ping

  1. Enter the target domain or URL (for example google.com) in the input field.
  2. Click "Start ping" and watch the latency chart update in real time.
  3. Review minimum, average, and maximum across attempts to assess connection quality to that server.

What is it for?

Visual ping measures latency to any domain with a clear chart—more intuitive than the terminal for users new to networking. It helps diagnose slowness, intermittent outages, or congested routes.

Admins, gamers, and remote workers use it before video calls, streams, or online games to see if a server responds within acceptable times or if switching networks makes sense.

By showing min, average, and max over consecutive attempts, visual ping gives a more reliable picture than a single isolated measurement.

Frequently asked questions

What latency is considered good in visual ping?

Under 100 ms usually feels smooth for browsing and casual gaming. Between 100 and 300 ms may affect real-time apps; above 300 ms suggests slow or distant routing.

Why does visual ping fail for some domains?

Some servers block ping requests or limit browser-based checks. Try another target or verify the domain spelling.

Is it the same as ping in CMD or Terminal?

It measures latency similarly but from the browser with a graph. Values may differ slightly by method and network path.

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