Proxy Overwatch

Proxy Overwatch



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Proxy Overwatch
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Using a proxy may cause connection, installation, or patching issues. Follow the steps for your operating system below to disable your proxy settings.
Note: If you've never used a proxy server, these settings can be enabled or activated by malware without your knowledge. If either of the proxy settings are checked, run antivirus software after unchecking them.
Troubleshooting steps for resolving network problems in World of Warcraft.
Problems with patching may be resolved by disabling the read-only setting on system folders.
What to do if you cannot toggle the War Mode setting.

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How to disable Voice Proxy and Battle.net Agent for improved game...
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How to disable Voice Proxy and Battle.net Agent for improved game performance
How to disable Voice Proxy and Battle.net Agent for improved game performance
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Step 1: Go to your [WoWFolder] and open World of Warcraft Launcher.exe
Step 2: Login to battle.net, update WoW if needed, and hit [Play]
Step 3: Login to any character on your character selection screen, let the game load for a moment, then [Exit Game]
Step 4: Go back to your [WoWFolder] , go to the Utils folder and rename WowVoiceProxy.exe to anything else, like WowVoiceProxy.exe.bak
Step 5: Locate your ProgramData folder (for windows users, this is normally located on your windows install drive, example: C:\ProgramData ).
Step 6: Inside the ProgramData folder, delete your Blizzard Entertainment and Battle.net folders
Step 7: Now, start the game by opening your [WoWFolder] and loading WoW.exe (NOT the launcher this time!)
You'll now be playing World of Warcraft without any Agent.exe or WowVoiceProxy making your life hell.
I recommend doing this process once a day to keep your client completely up to date (best performance).
Henceforth, you can just open WoW.exe to launch the game.
In other words, you don't have to repeat this process each time you open it, just ideally once daily.
Okay, now let's talk about what you are giving up.
I recommend doing this process once a day to keep your client completely up to date (best performance)
Except you won't be. You're doing the exact opposite. The only thing that checks that your game client is up-to-date and downloads the necessary patches is the Battle.Net client.
Deleting Battle.Net and going back to just running the WoW client directly, nothing is being downloaded in the background in preparation for the next major patch. So when a major patch hits, your client won't know until it tries to login and has to queue up the massive download...which by the way is going to be very slow because only the Battle.Net client distributes patch data via P2P.
Emergency hotfixes are not going to be applied, so you're going to sign in and see red text incompatible realms if there's been one.
You also give up single-sign-in. Which I get isn't a problem if all you play is WoW, but for the rest of us that also play StarCraft or Diablo or Hearthstone etc etc it's a lot more fun to just turn on your computer and click "Play" rather than having to enter your (hopefully) complex pain-in-the-ass password and then, oh yeah, answer your phone when authenticator goes "New IP who dis?"
Also, of course, chat with all those friends and guild mates. OK maybe Discord is good enough, but B.net has been around for years and there's still plenty of people I happen to only know from there or on there and nowhere else.
Oh yes, it's also great to manage your account with a single click, without having to login a second time to Blizzard's website, authenticate again, oh looks like we've never seen this computer, so we're going to make you change your password!
As for voice chat, the problem with picking and choosing shit is that you open the door to potential bugs, as the WoW client now assumes that program is running and do we really expect it to gracefully fail is someone has hacked it out of their AppData personal store?
The big unanswered question in all this is...what the hell are you even really saving? Do you have any idea how much bloat is wasted on integrated Microsoft services? Or Window Defender or Updates or hell, the 1000 programs installed by nVidia and Razer and Logitech and every peripheral maker since time began?
IMO your post is advocating a bad idea, for questionable gains that have yet to even be demonstrated in numerical terms.
Emergency hotfixes are not going to be applied, so you're going to sign in and see red text incompatible realms if there's been one.
The reason for the daily update is because, otherwise, you will begin to play in "streaming" mode when a hotfix or update hits, which hinders performance.
Updating after the weekly server maintenance means you'll never hit the "red server" issue you're talking about.
Most hotfixes, etc. tend to drop on off hours anyway, so if you update daily you're almost certainly fine.
You can immediately tell when a hotfix has dropped (you literally feel the difference), it takes just a minute to do the process again, and bam, you're good for at least another 24 hours.
oh looks like we've never seen this computer, so we're going to make you change your password!
This has literally never happened to me ever.
I've been doing this for years now.
Also, battle.net chatting still works, I talk to overwatch people just fine, etc.
You seem like you've got a lot of concern over this very inert, very simple little game optimization.
EDIT: Don't be afraid to break the bonds of Agent .exe.
nothing is being downloaded in the background in preparation for the next major patch
This would actually be of benefit to your gameplay performance and experience.
I'm not saying this is the case , but when I re-read what you said here:
The big unanswered question in all this is...what the hell are you even really saving? Do you have any idea how much bloat is wasted on integrated Microsoft services? Or Window Defender or Updates or hell, the 1000 programs installed by nVidia and Razer and Logitech and every peripheral maker since time began?
it just sounds like something someone who wrote the battle.net app would be saying to justify it against all the other bloatware out there.
Again, not saying that's the case, but it seems kinda defensive.
If you want to know about disabling any of that other bloatware that's another thread but I definitely think optimizing your system is a good thing on all fronts.
So what measurable difference has this made in your own system?
1 second faster game log in? 1ms lower ping? 1fps smoother graphics?
Please do tell. I'm all for optimizing my system.
These are actually useful elements that I might use slightly more often than never though. So it makes sense to have them running, if they're not impacting performance.
You're not the first to come out and say something about this being for "bad" systems only...
What kind of toaster are you playing on that disabling the in-game voice chat proxy would increase your FPS?
Would have been helpful awhile back when i was running off a laptop with integrated graphics and any minuscule difference helped. For all those people i understand your pain.
Wouldn't help all that much now, my 1080ti runs WoW nicely and the difference would probably be β‰₯1. As would follow with most top end systems.
You'll see a performance increase regardless.
The performance improvement is evident as soon as you try it.
Older system, single client? Check.
Older system, multiple clients? Double check.
New system, multiple clients? Oh yeah!
Weird system nut flexing, I tell ya...
EDIT: Top tier enthusiasts should be all about optimizations, not above them .
From the removed thread , asking about Agent.exe and WoWVoiceProxy.exe's purpose:
WowVoiceProxy is the new voice chat. Normally it will continue to run even if you've "disabled" voice chat via the interface.
Agent.exe is a battle.net agent process which I suspect collects additional telemetry, spends a good bit of time accessing the HDD, and definitely eats up additional bandwidth whatever it's doing.
In my view Agent.exe is basically a black box, a CPU, HDD and bandwidth drain and an additional assumed potential threat vector.

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