How packet loss feels in real life
- Broken or robotic voice calls
- Video freezing or buffering
- Characters teleporting in online games
- Slow or failed loading in cloud apps
Packet Loss Guide
Packet loss happens when some data never reaches its destination. Even small amounts of packet loss can make a connection feel unreliable, especially for calls, gaming, and live streams.
The ideal result. Data is arriving consistently without being dropped.
May still create occasional stutter, delayed voice, or game lag spikes.
Can cause severe instability, frozen calls, buffering, missing audio, and dropped online sessions.
Weak signal, overlapping channels, and distance from the router can all contribute.
Busy local traffic or overloaded ISP routes can lead to dropped packets.
Faulty, outdated, or overloaded hardware can create instability even at home.
The issue may be outside your home network if only specific services or regions are affected.
LizSpeedTest measures packet loss together with ping, jitter, and bandwidth so you can tell whether a bad connection is unstable, overloaded, or simply slow.