Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
MonsterMegs Looking Glass is a web-based tool for checking network connectivity and route quality. Based on the captured page content, it provides information for network locations such as Salt Lake City, Utah and Falkenstein, Germany, and allows users to run network tests against a specified target via the Looking Glass interface. It is closer to an auxiliary diagnostics page offered by a data center or network service provider than a full developer platform.
The page clearly provides three common network diagnostic methods: ping, mtr, and traceroute. These are useful for troubleshooting packet loss, latency, routing detours, and cross-region link quality issues. It also offers copyable IPv4 and IPv6 test addresses, indicating that it can be used to verify dual-stack network reachability. For speed testing, it provides 100M, 1G, and 10G test files, allowing users to download them locally and roughly evaluate throughput to this network.
From a developer-tooling perspective, the captured content does not show any API, SDK, CLI, Webhook, or automation integration capabilities, nor does it mention support for any programming language or framework. As a result, it currently looks more like a manually operated interactive network testing tool than a developer component that can be embedded into CI/CD pipelines, monitoring systems, or automation scripts. The page mentions PeeringDB, Facility, and a Network Location Map, suggesting that its network information has some public reference value, but ecosystem integration is not sufficiently described.
The page content does not mention pricing, plans, account systems, payment methods, or service SLAs. It also does not state whether this Looking Glass is open source, self-hostable, or available for third-party deployment. Users can only treat it as a public auxiliary testing entry point for MonsterMegs network services, and cannot use the page alone to assess commercial cost or long-term operational guarantees.
Its strengths are that it is straightforward and easy to use, covering ping, MTR, traceroute, and large-file download tests. This makes it suitable for an initial route-quality check before purchasing servers, hosting, or network services. Its drawbacks are limited information, lack of documentation, interfaces, node details, and support policies, making it unsuitable as an enterprise-grade monitoring or automated network observability platform. It is best suited for network administrators, operations engineers, developers, and potential customers who need one-off or temporary network quality testing.
The captured page content does not provide information about access from mainland China, network reachability, or payment options, so its accessibility from China is unknown. If using it from within China, it is recommended to test the Looking Glass page, IPv4/IPv6 addresses, and 100M/1G file download speeds directly. Alternatives include Hurricane Electric Looking Glass, RIPE Atlas, Cloudflare Speed Test, KeyCDN Tools, or the Looking Glass tools provided by the target cloud provider or data center.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on deligos.com official site.
deligos.com is an United States Dev Tools provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach deligos.com directly.