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Sometimes, it’s hard to trust internet speed tests, because when they show no problems, you may still notice websites not loading, games lagging, or video calls breaking up.

The problem is that you haven’t recognized the blind spot of speed tests. They are good for measuring connections to nearby servers, but they really don’t explain complex routing and latency issues. Globalping fills that gap. It runs network tests using real machines around the world, and no account or setup is required.

Globalping makes use of real devices connected to the internet. These are called probes, and they are located in different parts of the world.

Most speed tests run from your machine outward, but Globalping changes that perspective. It lets you test connections from different locations to a website, app, game server, API, and more.

A successful ping from your local machine shows a good connection to that server, but it doesn’t reflect what users in other locations experience. This information is handy if you run a website or any kind of online service. You no longer have to guess how people experience your service, because you can test the exact conditions they browse through.

I don’t use all of them, but the complete set increases your options if things feel off.

By design, traditional speed tests give you the best-case scenario because they run through nearby, optimized servers. This typically skews results positively, even if real internet usage doesn’t work the same way.

In reality, your traffic may travel across countries or continents and often doesn’t take the shortest path. It will generally stick to routes determined by ISPs and by peering agreements, and you typically have no visibility into any of these. This is what makes latency really unpredictable. Being physically close to a server doesn’t guarantee great performance, because traffic may still get routed along longer paths. As counterintuitive as this may sound, it happens more often than we realize.

Another factor is the difference between residential and data center networks. Your home or mobile connections are on residential networks and reflect real user experience, whereas data centers are more optimized and perform differently. You’ll draw an incomplete or misleading conclusion if you test one and assume it represents the other. In essence, the path your data travels, or who controls it, is often the culprit when something feels slow, not necessarily your connection speed.

Globalping is more of a practical, everyday tool than a strictly technical one. The simplest use case is the most popular one. You can test a website that feels slow from multiple global locations to know if it’s a global problem or isolated to specific regions.

However, it becomes even more valuable if you own a website, since you can target international audiences. Rather than assume that your CDN works globally, you can see the latency yourself. Gaming is another practical use case. Rather than blindly follow the server regions the game client suggests, you can test and choose the best region or server.

Globalping is also a more honest tool for host provider or CDN comparisons. Probe data will more accurately show you how a service performs across different continents than marketing pages.

This is how I translate common scenarios to Globalping tests:

Whether load times and domain resolution are consistent across continents

Timeouts, dropped packets, or delays significantly higher than elsewhere

To get started with any test, you simply navigate to the Globalping website, select the test type, type in the domain, and then either leave the default location or select a new one before running the test. In a few seconds, you will have results displayed on a map and the individual probe data just below the map.

You probably search for a ping test and choose one of the browser options that comes first in the results. These tools typically have the same limitation of testing from your own machine or from some other fixed locations. Globalping answers the question of how well a server performs when connecting from different parts of the world. Here is how it stacks against other options:

The biggest difference between Globalping and the other options is the level of context it gives. It helps you understand how packets travel from different regions.