Review Time
Speedify has been one of the worst software purchases I’ve made.
First: the product doesn’t reliably work in a real-world multi-WAN setup. The whole reason I bought Speedify was redundancy/bonding. Instead, when any one WAN connection flaps (Starlink being the obvious example), Speedify can drop the entire tunnel across ALL connections, including links that are perfectly stable. “Redundant mode” is supposed to handle instability — in my experience it does the opposite and takes everything down.
Second: the billing/licensing is a mess. They push a “router” license, but in practice it’s not clear what you’re actually getting versus a normal plan. It feels like confusing upsell tactics rather than clear, honest packaging.
Third (and worst): support is awful. Slow/nonresponsive, and when they do reply it’s mostly generic canned responses that don’t address the actual issue. It comes across as outsourced script-reading, not technical support. I repeatedly had to restate the same problem and still didn’t get a real solution.
Finally: when I asked for a refund due to the product not working as advertised for my use case, they refused. So I paid for software that actively made my connectivity worse, and they still wouldn’t make it right.
If you need stability for work calls (Teams/Zoom), or you’re buying Speedify specifically for “redundancy,” I’d strongly recommend looking elsewhere. In my experience this is an over-promising, under-delivering product backed by poor support and aggressive/unhelpful billing behavior.
Speedify has been one of the worst software purchases I’ve made.First: the product doesn’t reliably work in a real-world multi-WAN setup. The whole reason I bought Speedify was redundancy/bonding. Instead, when any one WAN connection flaps (Starlink being the obvious example), Speedify can drop the entire tunnel across ALL connections, including links that are perfectly stable. “Redundant mode” is supposed to handle instability — in my experience it does the opposite and takes everything down.Second: the billing/licensing is a mess. They push a “router” license, but in practice it’s not clear what you’re actually getting versus a normal plan. It feels like confusing upsell tactics rather than clear, honest packaging.Third (and worst): support is awful. Slow/nonresponsive, and when they do reply it’s mostly generic canned responses that don’t address the actual issue. It comes across as outsourced script-reading, not technical support. I repeatedly had to restate the same problem and still didn’t get a real solution.Finally: when I asked for a refund due to the product not working as advertised for my use case, they refused. So I paid for software that actively made my connectivity worse, and they still wouldn’t make it right.If you need stability for work calls (Teams/Zoom), or you’re buying Speedify specifically for “redundancy,” I’d strongly recommend looking elsewhere. In my experience this is an over-promising, under-delivering product backed by poor support and aggressive/unhelpful billing behavior.
=== SCAM ALERT ===Once you enroll in a subscription, there is no taking your money back. The support will gaslight you into thinking they refunded everything, whilst doing none of that. The people talking to you will switch, just to keep the illusion of doing something, but you will never receive your money back.The service is nothing more but a glorified VPN, which doesn't even work half the time. You want a stable and reliable connection for gaming? Then please, look for something else.
My use case was Starlink + iPhone tether with AT&T. I live in ruralish Alaska and unfortunately also have the hobby of playing MMOs, so getting disconnected became infuriatingly common. Starlink had too many dropouts, the phone by itself was more stable but couldn't handle the packet throughput during pvp and kicked me out that way. Using the service in redundant connection mode seriously improves the reliability. It's not perfect, sometimes both fail at the same time, which tells you how bad it was without this, but I'd say roughly 95% of fails are protected now. There's some performance hit in terms of speed and ping for connecting to their servers, but that's a price I'd happily play to actually get to play the game.It gives you stats on failovers and data usage and it's correct. My internet is bad, and it's doing its best to compensate.I got a 80% discount on the 3 year plan for the holidays. $3 a month for this is a very good deal, when the alternative is doing a bunch of home networking, buying my own router and server, and other network wizardry I would have to spend nearly $1k on and dozens of hours of headaches. For a plug and play solution, this was exactly what I was looking for, and I don't think there is any other option, literally. I'm grateful they exist.
It doesn't seem to work at all. It makes the connections slower than either of the connections individually and it makes my browser think I'm in a foreign country. Their own internal speed tests give inconsistent results and the streaming check just crashes.I understand that this is a technically challenging concept - but there's little point in paying for a service that doesn't work.
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