Onlive Server has expanded into Missouri, now offering dedicated server hosting tailored for businesses with higher performance demands than what shared or virtual environments provide. If your company’s infrastructure needs more reliability and control, this upgrade is pretty much the logical next step. The move gives companies in North America another option for high-performance infrastructure close to home.
Intel Xeon and AMD Ryzen processors power the servers, and they deliver bandwidth from 1 Gbps up to 10 Gbps for data-heavy operations. That mix of hardware and speed targets a broad range of use cases, from e-commerce sites expecting heavy traffic to gaming communities where lag can make or break the experience.
Unlike cookie-cutter hosting packages, you can shape these machines to fit your needs. Customers can pick between Linux distributions such as Ubuntu or Debian, or go with Windows if their stack relies on Microsoft technologies. The idea is to remove friction so businesses can run the environments they actually use, not just what comes standard.
Onlive Server is also putting weight behind reliability. Backup servers operate in a standby state, set to activate instantly if the primary system fails. In environments where system availability is critical, teams require this redundancy—it isn’t optional.
Missouri’s configurations? They span a comprehensive range, covering most operational needs. You’ve got Ryzen 9 and Core i9 systems for performance-intensive workloads, and if you need serious muscle, there are enterprise-grade Xeon and EPYC processors available. These setups use up to 128GB ECC RAM and pair it with NVMe SSDs in RAID arrays, giving you both speed and data protection. Each server comes with its own dedicated IP address and leverages fiber-backed global connectivity to ensure reliable, consistent performance.
For Onlive Server, adding Missouri is about more than just another location on the map. It offers regional businesses lower latency, gives international companies a faster route into the U.S. market, and opens a scalable path for organizations that want to keep control of their infrastructure as demands grow.
