: A balanced setting recommended for most home and office environments.

Arthur was a creature of habit. Every morning at 8:05 AM, he would pour his coffee, walk from his kitchen to his home office, and sit down for his daily video briefing.

Arthur’s laptop, "Old Reliable," was set to a .

Mr. Henderson’s face remained crystal clear.

| Level | Description | Roaming Trigger Condition (RSSI) | Behavior | |-------|-------------|----------------------------------|-----------| | | Least aggressive | Very weak (e.g., -75 to -80 dBm) | Stays connected longer, tolerates low speeds | | Medium | Balanced | Moderate (e.g., -65 to -70 dBm) | Default for most devices | | High | Most aggressive | Strong (e.g., -55 to -60 dBm) | Roams early, even with usable signal |

Your device acts as a "sticky client." It stays connected to the original AP until the signal is almost entirely gone, even if a much faster AP is right next to you.

Manufacturers use different scales (e.g., 1–5, Low/Medium/High), but the principle is universal:

Report compiled for network administrators, device managers, and Wi-Fi professionals.