Creating a LAN environment for people all around the world (not just in your living room)...

Zed Clampet

Community Contributor
Just recently came across Tailscale and have found it useful in gaming. Is great for games that have LAN options like Minecraft or Hytale. You can play together without manually creating a server.

Apologies, but it's just easier to paste what CoPilot says:

Gaming, modding, and LAN‑style collaboration​

Because it creates a virtual LAN, you can:
• Host LAN‑only games with friends across the world
• Run private Minecraft/Factorio/Satisfactory servers
• Share modding tools or local game servers
• Do remote debugging on each other’s machines
It’s basically “LAN party without the LAN.”

Plenty of other uses for this, especially in a non-gaming environment.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Pifanjr
Just recently came across Tailscale and have found it useful in gaming. Is great for games that have LAN options like Minecraft or Hytale. You can play together without manually creating a server.

Apologies, but it's just easier to paste what CoPilot says:



Plenty of other uses for this, especially in a non-gaming environment.

That reminds me of Hamachi and Tunngle, which I used to use for the same thing. Tunngle even had its own lobby/server lists, kind of like GameRanger.
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: Zed Clampet
A network that covers a larger area is normally called a WAN.

Looking into Tailscale, it actually creates a secure, private network (a "tailnet") for your devices, acting like a VPN but simpler, using WireGuard for encrypted, direct connections, even across different networks (like home and cloud).

it also appears to be for enterprise mostly but I could be wrong... web site doesn't look like its for regular customers but they do have personal plans.
 

Zed Clampet

Community Contributor
A network that covers a larger area is normally called a WAN.

Looking into Tailscale, it actually creates a secure, private network (a "tailnet") for your devices, acting like a VPN but simpler, using WireGuard for encrypted, direct connections, even across different networks (like home and cloud).

it also appears to be for enterprise mostly but I could be wrong... web site doesn't look like its for regular customers but they do have personal plans.
We just use the free version. Haven't bumped into any limitations yet.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Pifanjr

TRENDING THREADS

Latest posts