A good Wi-Fi 7 routers choice rewards matching the part to your room, your screen and your budget, not the spec sheet.
Quick Answer
For SA fibre gamers, a Wi-Fi 7 router is worth it if you run a fast line and want low, steady latency, thanks to wider channels and Multi-Link Operation. On a 100Mbps line the gains are modest; on 500Mbps to 1Gbps fibre they're clear. Quality Wi-Fi 7 routers start around R3,500.
What Wi-Fi 7 adds
Wider 320MHz channels, 4K-QAM and Multi-Link Operation cut congestion and stabilise latency, which matters more than peak speed for gaming. The result is fewer lag spikes on a busy home network. You need Wi-Fi 7 client devices to see the full benefit.
Does your SA line justify it
Pair Wi-Fi 7 with 500Mbps-plus fibre and modern devices to feel the difference. On slower lines or older laptops, a good Wi-Fi 6E router is the smarter spend. A wired connection still beats any Wi-Fi for the lowest ping.
Setup tips for steady ping
Place the router central and high, enable the 6GHz band for gaming devices, and keep firmware current. If your desk is fixed, a single Ethernet run remains the gold standard for competitive play.
In practice, a balanced choice beats chasing the highest number on the box.
Keep your eye on real frame rates and daily comfort rather than spec-sheet bragging rights.
A little planning here saves money and a return trip later on.
A little planning here saves money and a return trip later on.
FAQ
Is Wi-Fi 7 worth it on slow fibre?
Less so. On a 100Mbps line you won't notice much. The gains show on 500Mbps to 1Gbps fibre with Wi-Fi 7 devices.
Do I need new devices for Wi-Fi 7?
To get the full benefit, yes. Your phone, laptop or PC card must support Wi-Fi 7. Older devices still connect but at prior standards.
Is wired still better for gaming?
Yes, for the lowest and steadiest ping. If your PC sits at a fixed desk, an Ethernet cable beats any wireless option.
Check live Evetech stock and pricing, then pick the tier that suits your games and desk.