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Nahlásit problém s překladem
Keep in mind that Destiny 2 is a large game, so depending on the speed of your connection it is bound to take time.
Steam itself can saturate even Gigabit connections, usually the HDDs throttle before the Steam download servers do.
WiFi may be a problem, but it's not the important part here -- your ISP gives you "Internet", usually via the telephone line or a TV cable, but it might be something else. You get a certain speed from them -- nothing you do will ever get up above that speed, other than upgrading your contract with them.
That "Internet" arrives in some box, usually a "router". Your WiFi just goes to that router, so the actual "Internet" is beyond that.
So, the first question is -- what does your ISP give you, and what do you actually get when downloading. Because if those are close enough then there's nothing to be done anyway.
Internet -> Modem -> Router -> Wi-Fi -> Endpoint
That is the only chain that makes sense. Usually Modem, Router and Wi-Fi access point are in one device in home setups, but that doesn't change the facts in which order the signal travels.