Excellent advice.
Just a few caveats I would like to toss in.
Gaming consoles have access to your credit/debit card!
If you choose to DMZ your consoles, please secure the hell out of your console. No more automatically logging in, require passwords for everything, so not leave it powered on when not in use, do not allow it to be turned on from another source. (Or wake on LAN for IT peoples)
For example..
PS4 users. If you're console is in your DMZ I would not allow updates and downloads to wake your console up.
Turn on require password for checkout
Turn on require password to log into PSN all the time, and do it manually.
and..... NO MORE REST MODE!
I thoroughly recommend only using your DMZ to troubleshoot connectivity problems where you need to rule out firewall rules/issues.
As for static IPs.
I do it I use the Manual DHCP method. Where i put the mac addresses of my important devices into DHCP and assign the addresses to them in there. So everytime i connect my console to my network my router will assign it the same address each time. This requires no changes on the console.
If you can't figure this feature out, you can just go to the network settings of your console and just type everything in there manually. I would pick an available IP address near the end of your network.
For example:
(People that don't like changing default settings on routers. This will likely work for 95% of you)
IP Address = 192.168.1.250
Subnet Mask = 255.255.255.0
Default gateway = 192.168.1.1
Enjoy!
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I'll put my ps4 on rest mode whenever I want thank you.
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That's fine. Just remember DMZ=Security Risk.
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most people use 2FAuth on their consoles nowadays. Also most modern routers have a SPA(statefull packet inspection) firewall enabled by default. This is a fancy way of saying the router looks at all the outbound and inbound converstions and matches an outbound conversation to an inbound one. if the convestion only has an inbound one with a corresponding outbound one then the connection gets dropped.
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I don't even know what that is, but thanks for the heads up.