If you are happy with the performance you get out of your existing hardware then you are happy with it.
Technology
A nice place to discuss rumors, happenings, innovations, and challenges in the technology sphere. We also welcome discussions on the intersections of technology and society. If it’s technological news or discussion of technology, it probably belongs here.
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Can't comment on the DOCSIS, I don't know enough about it to not be making stuff up.
Regarding WiFi though... The simple answer is if you're not having trouble accessing the WiFi in the places you use the WiFi and you're getting the full speed that you're paying for, there's not a ton of a reason to upgrade the router.
The exception to this is that most routers only get a few years of security updates like most phones... That can potentially leave your network more vulnerable as the router might not properly block unsolicited traffic from making it to your devices. There's a solid argument that you should just have your devices secured via their own firewalls though.
The Google routers are nice for the average Joe because they just kind of work and keep themselves updated (and Google tends to keep the hardware they sell under the Nest name receiving security updates a VERY long time compared to the competition). Netgear has been my go to for years but their update mechanism is ... fairly manual in my experience.
I've since moved to having a pfSense box for the firewall and routing side of things and using my old negate router in access point mode (I'm much less concerned about this setup).
I'll add that I don't recommend WiFi for gaming... And that most people have more download speed than they really "need." Files really haven't gone up in size much (sure games have) but evening else... meh (?). Video streaming is more popular but unless you've got a lot of people in your home or you stream at 4k, it's really not going to be that noticable between 30Mbps and 1Gbps. So like, by all means if you don't want to spend money, don't... you're probably fine.
Wireless game streaming is another reason to upgrade WiFi. I couldn't stream anything from my wired desktop to my Steam Deck on WiFi from the ISP-supplied router. I just finished upgrading to a WiFi mesh network partly because of that... but I haven't tested game streaming yet.
I expect it should do great, though. My Fire Stick used to occasionally buffer even with ~1.5GB/hr content, but I just tried a 1080p remux at 15GB/hr and it worked great.
I needed to upgrade my modem because the isp capped the speed of docsis 3.0 modems to like 75Mbps. I remember being quite upset because I was previously getting 125Mbps service on the same modem. I seem to recall there was a quasi legit technical reason for it though.
I can't speak to your modem situation exactly, but I believe you only need the newer modem if you are actually getting that bandwidth from your provider. If you are pretty well below the 3.0 ceiling, I think you're probably just fine.
Re: the router: a newer one can be helpful if you are having issues with wireless devices farther from the router losing connection. If you have a big house, you would be better off with mesh. If you have a small house or apartment, a new Wifi 6 router would solve that problem for you. And most importantly: if you aren't experiencing any obvious issues with your wifi, it probably isn't worth the price of an upgrade.
I have a separate modem from my WiFi, but I'd sell you mine that's a couple of years old for $50 because I just upgraded to fiber a few months ago and it's just sitting in my network corner. But if you want one with integrated WiFi, this isn't.