Bitcomet Port Forwarding (TCP/UDP)
Today, i’ve found this guide on how to do port forwarding on your bitcomet. No wonder i wasn’t getting good speeds, it’s bcoz i didn’t get any remote connection.After i done this, my speed slightly increase, with remote type connection appearing over the peers of course. After that, i’d found another problem, ever since service pack 2 was introduced, they will only provide 10 tcp connection, and so, i have to edit it..again. And once again, thanks to this guide for showing me how.
Your download speed in BitTorrent/BitComet, or any other P2P (Peer-2-Peer) application for that matter, relies on the upload speed of others - so do not assume that because you get xxKB/s when downloading from web sites that you will always get xxKB/s with BitComet. Slow download speeds are almost always because the upload bandwidth required to provide you with fast downloads just isn’t there… so there is no way to magically speed it up, other than going out and buying everyone who you’re downloading from (seeds/peers) a faster internet connection.
With that said, if you do the following you should end up with around the best possible speeds:
1) Configure Port Forwarding
BitComet requires you to be able to receive incoming connections. If you’re behind a NAT router (this does not apply to modems) but don’t have port forwarding configured properly, incoming connections will be stopped by your router (won’t reach your computer) and you’ll end up with speeds of only a small percentage of what you’re capable of getting. You need to configure port forwarding so your router knows that the incoming connections are for BitComet and will be allowed through (forwarded) to your computer.
An easy way to see if your port forwarding is configured properly or not is to see if you’re receiving incoming connections to BitComet by doing the following test…
Start downloading a torrent that has lots of seeds/peers (like 100+), wait 5 minutes then look in the Peers section (bottom left of BitComet). Under the ‘Initiation’ column on the bottom pane, look to see if some peers are listed as Remote or if they’re all Local. Make sure you scroll all the way down the list and look at all of them.
If you have a mix of Remote and Local like the picture above, it’s a sign that your port forwarding is configured properly already (probably done automatically via UPnP) — so skip to the next section.
Note: It doesn’t matter how many Remote/Local connections you have, all that matters is you have both.
If you only have Local initiated connections (and possibly also NAT Traversal connections) like the picture above, it means incoming connections are most probably being stopped by your router or firewall, so you need to configure port forwarding.To configure port forwarding, open up BitComet and go to Options > Preferences.
Here you need to enter a single “Listen Port” to be used for BitComet. It’s best to use a listen port between 49152 and 65534 because they’re classed as “Dynamic and/or Private Ports” by IANA, so nothing else should be using them by default and they’re not the standard ones blocked by ISPs or trackers, but you can enter any other port you wish. It’s strongly recommended that you don’t use any between 1-5000, 6881-6999 or any listed on this page to avoid compatability problems. Again, it’s best to choose a number between 49152 and 65534.
Write down your Listen Port number before clicking OK to exit out of BitComet’s preferences.
Next, in windows, click ‘Start’ then ‘Run…’
Type ‘cmd’ and press enter.
You should now be at a command prompt (a black box), so type ‘ipconfig’ and press enter. It should show you something similar to this:
“IP Address” is your computers IP address that you need to forward the port to.
“Default Gateway” should be your routers internal IP address.
Write down both of these numbers and then you can close the command prompt window.
Now you have all the information required to configure port forwarding in your router. But because there are so many routers and they’re all different, I can’t explain step-by-step how to configure port forwarding in your exact model. Hopefully you can find your router on this list and view step-by-step port forwarding instructions. If it’s not there, look for some by the same manufacturer (because they’ll probably be similar to yours), read your user guide or just start browsing through it’s configuration sections - look for something along the lines of “virtual server”, “port mapping” or “port forwarding”. If you don’t know the username and password for your router, check your user guide or see the default password list.
When configuring port forwarding in your router, you need to do the following…
Log in to your router by entering the “Default Gateway” (the number you wrote down earlier from the ipconfig) into your web browser, like this:
Then navigate to the section for port forwarding and forward the “Listen Port” that you entered in BitComet’s preferences to your computers “IP Address” for TCP & UDP. If it asks for a ’start port’ and ‘end port’, enter your Listen Port in both. If it doesnt have an option for “TCP & UDP” together, first do port forwarding for TCP then repeat the process and choose UDP the second time.
After you’ve done that, restart BitComet and try the test for Remote connections again. If you set up port forwarding correctly you should now be getting some Remote connections — along with greatly increased speeds.
NOTE: Another cause for a lack of incoming connections can be from an incorrectly configured transparent proxy (no configuration needed on the clients end) being run by your ISP which is not be sending your real IP address to trackers run on port 80. If this is the case, there isn’t much you can do other than emailing your ISP and asking them configure the proxy to report your current IP address in HTTP_X_FORWARDED_FOR rather than the proxy’s IP address. You can check proxy settings here (you may have a problem if doesn’t display the IP address that your ISP has assigned you at the top of the page or as “X-Forwarded-For”).
For these reasons, it’s strongly recommended that you check for remote initiated connections with a torrent that uses a tracker on a port other than 80 (if it displays port 80 or no port at all in the tracker address then it uses port 80, so try a different one).
by,
Destiny
May 25th, 2006 at 4:56 pm
Thanks Yim.
This helped me out a lot.
July 24th, 2006 at 5:22 am
ok, i got to the part where i type in the default gateway number into the browser, it took me to this westell page and i could not find anything called port forwarding, it kept asking me for a username and password.
July 24th, 2006 at 5:35 am
and the default username and password don’t work
July 29th, 2006 at 11:54 am
erm, no idea then, try resetting your router and try again
August 13th, 2006 at 3:00 am
yeah..i did like u did..explore many info on net regard the bitcomet..but the thing is..when i use the 0.60 version, got no problem with DHT node connection..but now when i use the 0.70 version..it shows not connected at all…fuuh..dunno wher the thing is wrong..configue my xp firewall..the router firewall too..but the connection is fine..i got connection from both local and remote…any idea??..juz asking…tq
August 29th, 2006 at 7:21 pm
Thanks, I have just configured my router and -apparently- I am already experiencing better speeds.
P.S. what is DHT as I am experiencing a similar problem to Kira (ie one computer using bitcomet 0.64 has DHT while second computer using 0.70 has no DHT!)version 0.70 machine seems to be experiencing lower speeds
Any advice would be appreciated!
Thanks again for the port forwarding advice!
September 5th, 2006 at 7:11 am
I can’t seem to find anything for port forwarding using the Scientific Atlanta DPX2203C model anywhere on Google, or even the official (slow) website. Could someone help me out?
September 11th, 2006 at 5:39 am
hey,
i did as it all says, no problems, except all initiations are still local, no visible faster rates, in fact slightly slower however it is trying to download from torrents that have not been going for a while, can you or anyone help me?
i have a 1mb dsl connection and typical d/load rates are between 1kb/s to 15kb/s with the odd torrent stretching to 24kb/s does this sound good or bad? haha i know it depends mostly on other seeders too
cheers!
September 17th, 2006 at 8:43 am
Hello, do these instructions not apply to laptops with integrated wifi? I have a broadcom 802.11bg adapter and the default gateway 192.168.1.1 does nothing in IE or firefox, it just says page not displayed. I’ve tried looking on the HP website, in internal help glossaries, and for broadcom port forwarding on google. I haven’t been able to find any info. on how to access my router to port forward. If you have any ideas, please let me know. TY
September 17th, 2006 at 11:58 am
click start , run, type cmd, press enter, type ipconfig in the black box, press enter, the third line, tells you your default gateway as it is stated, or mayb that’s not a router..not all default gateways are 192.168.1.1
port forwarding doesn’t means that you’ll get faster speeds, basicly it’s like a hope, since the number of peers have increased, the chance that you’ll get to download from is higher
here’s a trick, on some torrents, I’ve noticed that when I preview the movie, the download speed goes twice or even thrice the one before. I downloaded the entire Gundam Seed series using this way in one week, going 50+kB/s ( i have 512kb dsl connection)and at the same time your upload speed shoots up as well, the limit won’t work, so it’s your choice, high dl speed = high upload speed
September 17th, 2006 at 12:09 pm
As for DHT it’s a network that allows you to connect to peers even when the tracker is off. So basicly it allows you to connect to people who is using the same torrent but different trackers, giving you more peers. There were issues about this matter as people are complaining because some trackers are private ones, and DHT is making it not.
As for me, version 0.70 doesn’t seems to have any problem, mine says ‘DHT connected node 1372′ and right click the torrent and enter the properties, enter advance and make sure you enabled the first 2nd and third option, Public DHT Network and Peer Exchange.
September 24th, 2006 at 9:10 am
Hey destiny,
Innitially when I’ve yet to go through port forwarding, I was running at 90-100 over kb, but there were lots of files that i wasn’t innitiating connection eventhough there were 2000 over peers and seeders, as/and my DHT was not connected.
After going through the procedure of port forwarding, my DHT was connected and I was able to connect to all sorts of peers (and 80-90% remote and the remaining locals). However,my downloads has dropped drastically and i’m only running mostly on 28kb per second, with a maximum of 42kb for the past 3 days.
My DHT’s connected, I have no personal Firewall and I even enabled the first 2nd and third option, Public DHT Network and Peer Exchange in properties.
What other options do I have in order to increase my speed?
Does this phenomenon only happens to version 0.70?
Please advise…
September 24th, 2006 at 5:41 pm
I don’t think 0.7 has anything to do with it though….
since you said that port forwarding decreases your download speed, then try not to do port forwarding, and see if the speed goes up ;)sometimes bitcomet stops iniatiating connections. I don’t know why but mayb they timed out. Did you increase the number of max connections and stuffs? there’s a few more guides here that people seldom go, it’s under the techs section at the right navigation bar. Have a look at those
September 29th, 2006 at 2:04 pm
There are other things that need to tweaked both in Bitcomet and the computer. Unfortuately this will be long to explain, but it will be easy to do since they are small tweaks and are easy to handle even by novice users. I hope this is helpfull for all of you…. Here it goes………
First things first: find out your connection speed. google (speakease speed test) and test your speed now although your d/l sped is important you need to focus more on the u/l speed. divide your upload speed by 80% (i.e) u/l= 250 use this little formula: u/l speed times .80 and divide by 8. It Should look like this 250*.80 = 200/8 = 25 . Keep that number. then lets go to Bitcomet.
Once bitcomet is open do the following, go to Options-Preferences. In Global Max Download Rate you can leave it as No limit. Now in Global Max Upload Rate put that number that you kept (25). Next delete the port that is there by default and use the port that you forwarded from your router. Then go to Tasks
Tasks: Maximun Upload Rate per task: same number as before (25)
Minimun upload rate per task : 2
Minimum upload rate per seeding task: 3
Next go to Appearance.Here only change Max peers to display: Any high number (10000)
Next go to Advance and make sure that you have Add DHT network as backup tracker CHECKED.
Next go to Connection and check first three (3) boxes. Then adjust this settings as follows..
Maximum connections per task: 100000
Connections to keep per task: 50000
Global maximum upload slots: 2
Global minimum upload slot: 1
Now the most important thing of it all [Max half-open TCP connection: "50"] Here is why. After windows Xp came out with Service Pack 2 they reduce this feature to 10 in all PCs running this update. This is what controls how much badwith is streaming into your computer, Unfortunatelly this means that you have to play with this feature in Windows too, we will do this next but BE AWARE opening it too much in your Pc might make it crash because of an over load of bandwith coming in. Also this is reduced for a reazon, it limits the amount of probabilities of catching a worm or virus so if you are going to do this you sould have an antivirus sofware that is up to date and running.
So far we are done with Bitcomet. NOW comes the Computer Part. We are going to open the
Max Half-Open Connections in your Pc. There are a couple of ways of doing this, it is easier if it is done with a patch, look for this patch with your favorite search engine: EvID4226 It is going to be a zip file so save to a location that you will remember and unzip it from there after you download it. Run the patch, when the black screen appear follow the instructins on it to change the number from 10 to 60( bitcomet 50, Pc 60 ) That way you will be left with 10 for the regular ussage of windows, that is plenty for it. When completting the change it will tell you that this change will change some file and might make them unrecognisable to Windows, this will no affect you at all and nothing will be changed so dont worry nothing will happen. when this is done just close the screen and reboot the pc. Next try using bitcomet and your speed shoukld be a lot better than it is now.
Please reply to let people know if it worked for you and that way they will be more confident to try this.
I hope i was of help to you and all others who are having problem with bitcomet. Good luck to all.
September 29th, 2006 at 2:07 pm
Thanks Destiny for this blog and i hope i am not being out of line by posting here.
September 29th, 2006 at 3:00 pm
it’s ok, actually i have those guides about the half open connections limit, they’re scattered all around the tech section but I always welcome new settings ^^
September 30th, 2006 at 12:24 pm
People, people, just so you know. If you are downloading from a private tracker most likely your DHT in NOT going to be connected. Another thing, DHT will not affect your download speed at all, the only thing it will affect is the amount of peers you connect to that are downloading or leashing the same part of the file that you are in need of. You should be more preocupied about the connections you are receiving, you need to see that you are getting Remote connections along with Local connections. It doesn’t matter how many as long as you have some. If you have remote connections then your ports are most likely to be forwarded the right way and this is what will increase or decrease your speed.
October 1st, 2006 at 3:13 am
post nr. 14 really helped me.. i’v tried anything, but nothing got my speed past 10-30, until now.. 100-120 kbs,, can recomend nr 14
October 1st, 2006 at 12:22 pm
Links to other guides

Half open connection guide”
Bitcomet firewall”
bitcomet troubleshooter
enjoy
November 17th, 2006 at 12:38 am
i can say just that it doesn’t seem to work..at least at me..the speed is the same
December 29th, 2006 at 2:52 am
i need help setting my port i know how to do it but i dont what number to pick the bitcomet will open it im alway getting slow dl
December 30th, 2006 at 12:10 am
it’s best to choose a number between 49152 and 65534.
The ports doesn’t matter much on speed.
Hint: Port 1720 is reserved port for VoIP, try using that port
January 1st, 2007 at 8:28 pm
hey…very good pointers…the thing is i did c some increase in my d/l rate… but offlate ‘too much rubbish data is getting dropped’ usually for a 1gig file it used drop some 12-15mb…acceptable… but now since i’ve changed the settings its dropping some 100mb for a 800mb file… this has sorta multiplied the time taken for me to download…seems its downloading rubbish all the time…?
help..!!
January 9th, 2007 at 12:18 am
Will be appreciated if you include all the pictures inside. I cannot view the pictures!
January 10th, 2007 at 9:47 pm
@zulu : this has nothing to do with those pointers, most probably the torrent is broken or something else
@Ichigo: Ok… i’ll put em up soon
January 10th, 2007 at 10:44 pm
Hi. I am a total newbie to bittorrents!
i have followed your advice and have forwarded the prots on my huawei axmt800a modem but still have really slow rates. i am using a dsl connection (32/128 - i think although i have no idea what that means). the speeds i get on bitcomet are 5kB/s DOWN and 3kB/s UP which sounds very slow to me. any ideas on how i can speed it up?
it seems i have a good mix of remote and local users
also - i can’t seem to browse internet while bitcomet is on. is that normal?
January 31st, 2007 at 5:05 am
I was using BitComet 0.60. I bought a new computer, downloaded and installed BitComet 0.82 and suddenly my DSL connection was really sloooooow.
Uninstalled BC 0.82, found the old BC 0.60, and downloads are back to their usual selves! Yey! New versions are not necessarily good: remember, if it ain’t broke, don’t hurry to try the new version and fix it!
January 31st, 2007 at 6:05 pm
yea, i agree, i’m using 0.7 and i’m not gonna change unless they have a very very very nice and new feature
sometimes you can’t browse while using bitcomet, try increasing your max half open tcp connection limit
February 8th, 2007 at 9:19 pm
i opened the port of my bitcomet(i wanted to use utorrent but my bro go use and opeded the port so i cant use den my bro tell me try bitcomet) and saw my dl and upload speed was 0kb/s i dunno y it cant download,the trackers are working even my utoorent which port isnt opened can even dl better den my bitcomet
May 18th, 2007 at 7:41 am
i tried to follow the port forwarfd for my netgear wgt624 v3 but it does not have option of tcp/udp so does that mean no port forwarding.. the other stuff worked amazingly well expecially the download formula.. i do have the followign options would any of these work.. AIM, FTP, HTTP, ICUII, PPTP thanks
May 27th, 2007 at 6:00 am
I´ve tryed all of what I read here. I´ve even tryed changing the MTU size on the router WAN settings. Nothing seem to work really. Now after 5 min of reading this blog and trying to use a port on the correct range I do get some Remote Initiations on the peer list, but my speed is still ridiculously slow. My router is a netgear and I have to use it because I´m sharing internet with my roommate. What makes me sure that the router is the problem is that when I directly connect my modem to the computer I get downloads 10x faster (10x no joke). So basically I hate my router and dont know what to do anymore (besides throuing it on the wall and yelling at it).
May 27th, 2007 at 6:01 am
Oh and thanks for the information and all…I will keep trying =D
May 27th, 2007 at 11:55 pm
weird…i connect my router to a switch to share the internet connection, instead of connecting a modem to a router. ADid you know that a router can connect by itself and take the space of a modem?
June 11th, 2007 at 8:54 pm
Hi. I know this is a bit of topic, but im having a bit of a problem with a clients laptop. Its a Toshiba Satellite, and i was trying to install HUAWEIs EC325 usb modem on the machine, but it doesnt seem to go through. Ive checked with the technical department of the service provider too, but they are confused too. The message when you check the status of the modem on the properties of the modem show its not working well, and something to the effect that theres a conflict or something along those line. I really would appriciate any help someone would be able to provide.
July 22nd, 2007 at 10:31 pm
port start and port end put same ??
what is port map ??
October 23rd, 2007 at 6:37 pm
Thanks alot!!i had been lookin fr dis kinda help fr quite sometime now…i just followed da instructions which are perfectly clear & i am experiencing better speeds olready! Thanks a tonne!:)
October 24th, 2007 at 4:08 pm
port map can be anything, i just put back the same number. welcome preiya, glad you find it ez to understand
October 28th, 2007 at 4:39 pm
my os is win xp sp2.how i can set my tcp/ip limit?
October 30th, 2007 at 12:35 am
http://seventhheavens.wordpress.com/2006/03/27/bitcomet-half-open-connections-limits/
November 2nd, 2007 at 11:57 am
hey guys,
I have done the port forwarding but the speed of my bitcomet is decreasing. Does anyone know why?
November 9th, 2007 at 9:52 am
This did absolutely nothing.
I am not understanding how just typing “BitComet” and a few numbers into the router’s firmware will speed up anything….
November 13th, 2007 at 11:31 am
WOW! What a difference. Feel so stupid! I’ve been using BitComet for months without port forwarding setup on my router. I just thought it was supposed to be that slow. Guess I’m the slow one. Thanks a million!!!!!!
November 16th, 2007 at 2:42 pm
@*sigh* : nobody said about the speed increasing, it’s just luck, read the comments above
@Doit2it : great to see everything works out for you ^^
November 21st, 2007 at 5:54 am
thank you destiny
December 11th, 2007 at 11:28 pm
heyy all of u telling about port forwarding……thanx a lot ir realy slowed down my speed and now i have to download a new bitcomet..thanx destiny it did nothing ur port forwading,instead of increasing my speed is decreasing..
December 13th, 2007 at 11:08 am
lolz
December 17th, 2007 at 4:33 am
thanks guys it was smooth and successful!!!
:)
December 17th, 2007 at 4:35 am
thanks guys it was smooth and successful!!!!!!!
:) 
December 17th, 2007 at 3:33 pm
thanks… after reading a million tutorials, it was yours that finally “worked” for me.
December 18th, 2007 at 8:58 am
i did everything but its the same max dl 20KB/s
what can i do???
December 20th, 2007 at 6:21 am
u can port forward a wgt624 v3. Pick “AIM” or whatever, then apply. After that, you can “Edit” the name from AIm to bitcomet, change port, and tcp, udp, or tcp/udp both. I chose both. All lights went green after a bitcomet recheck, and dl’s went way up.
January 5th, 2008 at 10:57 am
When I go to run and type in “cmd”, a message used to come up, and it made me close the black box. Now when I do it, a message dosen’t even show up. It closes on its own. What is the problem?
January 12th, 2008 at 6:04 pm
Hey I need like a lotta help see my ISP is a total fucking download nazi so port forwarding is out of the question but when i try http downloads i get great speeds only bittorrent files give me problems as in they stand still not even one kb the dht node is connected but the the port status stays on detecting please anyone who can help i would be really grateful
May 2nd, 2008 at 8:32 pm
Haha well happy this worked. went from 20kbs to 150kbs couldnt believe it! Thanks alot destiny - very much appriceated!!
June 13th, 2008 at 11:49 pm
I can’t thank you enough. I just spent hours trying to follow other guides. Found yours and it took minutes and speeds are great. thank you!
June 26th, 2008 at 9:11 am
wowow thx man i can finally post forward the ports and i see the remote connections
August 13th, 2008 at 4:11 am
thank you Destiny!! thank you very much for this clear guide!!!
For those who live in France and use freebox. First as shown in this guide obtain IP of your computer. It should be something like 192.168.X.Y. Log in to the rooter through the free website. Then choose “Internet”. Then go to “Configurer mon router Freebox”. You will find there “Redirection de port”. In the field “Port” put the port number you got from BitComet (both fields the same). For the “Protocole” choose first “udp” . Next put you IP in the “Destination” field. Click “Ajouter”. Repeat this for the “tcp” protocole. Now reboot freebox and restart BitComet. YOu should have now green status!!!
September 4th, 2008 at 10:29 pm
glad everyone’s doing fine with bitcomet, spread this to your friends and families and refer to this guide if there’s any troubles. Do try to help those in troubles if you can
September 27th, 2008 at 2:43 am
thanks alot
October 19th, 2008 at 3:02 am
I had the yellow light problem appear after having not connected to bitcomet for awhile. Tried everything although I knew my router was already port forwarded correctly.
After searching all settings on computer that were internet related I remember messing with something on McAfee once. It turns out it was my McAfee firewall protection settings.
I you have McAfee Security Suite with the firewall enabled, make sure the firewall is set to STANDARD and not stealth. Stealth keeps all the incoming connections from getting through making your computer completely invisible, thus denying the peer to peer connections for full connectivity in BitComet.
Changed mine back to STANDARD and everything is fine now. Changed it back and forth from standard to stealth several times to test and confirm and that was it.
Hope this helps anyone else out who may be having issues and is using McAfee firewall.
P.S. Remember, my firewall port forwarding was also properly set as well.
October 28th, 2008 at 5:14 pm
Hail Destiny, Jedi Knight of the torrenting bit. Seriously, lucid and correct is like…gold.
Before I ask, I’ll try to give. Faizel - the thing about nazi’s is that when the good men doing nothing, the result in more nazi’s. I haven’t benchmarked it, but I seem to recall reading that if you set outgoing encryption to ‘forced’ (Options/Preferences/Bit Torrent in Bit Torrent 6.1.1 anyway), the jack-booted thugs at your ISP have a harder time identifying you as undesirable, and capping your bandwidth. This is worth exploring cause once you get these torrents humming, you will never go back to http — 4 threads rocks, 4000 will fill your 120 Gig drive in no time. Anyway, I guess the trade off is encryption takes time. I was also puzzled at first why only outgoing connections are hashed, and then it dawned on me. I think it’s either cause you can’t control what a remote client sends you, and what’s more, TCP/IP packets go out from your IP address in consecutive blocks (some TCP/IP parameter, I forget which) but come in from all over the planet in no guaranteed order or timeframe. De facto encryption. Not sure about UDP datagrams though — that is a connection oriented protocol (TCP/IP just blasts away and hopes for the best). Which leads me back to my question.
I realized — d’oh, Homer Simpson like — after months of watching the # of DHT nodes get pinned at 300 (incidentally, this seems to shadow the dl rate at 295 kps on a 3.3 Gig dsl line) that maybe I had to set up of a port forwarding service for UDP as well. Which I did, and it bought me 30 kbs. I’m happy but back to square 1 since the # of DHT connections stayed at around 300. This is probably an RTFM question, but what determines that. Also, oddly, when I added the UDP port forwarding service (BT supports DHT & pfwding), I started getting mutant type invalid tracker urls; like udp:\\yattayattta.com:80. I’m out of my depth — port 80 is for http which is fubar, but also wondering if udp:\\ is even a valid construct for a web URL.. They don’t do any harm — but it makes me wonder what else I’m clueless about and that in turn, is making me drink more heavily than I should. Hep me. Peace out..
November 26th, 2008 at 9:52 am
[...] To visitors who came here through my old blog, please use the search button at the upper right to look for what you want. If you’re looking for Bitcomet, then click HERE. [...]
June 8th, 2009 at 7:22 am
thank so much destiny iv bin looking on blogs 4 weeks tryin 2 get my yellow light green and nufin worked or they were 2 hard 2 understand, once again thanx u need a medal
June 14th, 2009 at 1:48 pm
EEpppp!! Download speed just increased!!! TQ!! I feel like dancing right now!! lol thanks for the clear tutorials
it’s very easy to follow through step by step, thanks a lot~
June 17th, 2009 at 6:49 pm
i have nothing thats called preferences inside my options… WTF!!!
July 3rd, 2009 at 6:15 am
Im thinking most of these people simply should not be using P2P/pirating or computers at all.. read a book or take a class everyone.. anyway.. thanks for helping out the noobs destiny…. but its best to let morons remain in the dark.. give them a little information and they destroy the ‘puters they got for christmas… but your a better man than I. If you cant figure this out yourself.. go buy an NES off of ebay or just buy your software..
November 17th, 2009 at 11:34 am
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