From what I have found, a bridged modem only applies to a modem-router combo. Since I have a Motorola modem and Asus router, is it not already in bridged mode?
I've been trying to muster enough testosterone to strap on Unbound, but I haven't made the move yet.
my recollection is that in the documentation, Motorola indicated that if your ISP made any kind of adjustments to it from their end, it could've become unbridged and started routing -> Double NAT. That's not a bad thing necessarily, but can add a few ticks of time to what youre trying to do, and eat up a tiny number of router processing cycles...a little speedbump, if you will. but the biggest thing is disabling the QoS on it (AQM, I believe they call it) and taking control of shaping ins to/outs from your network on the router itself...so rather than spiky spdMerlin charts, you'll see a much more consistent speed to your connection, and the user experience will be much more smooth/reliable. the 400-900 down speeds from the above chart will probably end up at the theoretical maximum, possibly or maybe above the top/best "speed" you've seen so far
You will probably like Unbound, when you make the time to install and configure it to your needs/wants: the config it installs with works wonderfully, and you can streamline/enhance from there. It's not as daunting if you keep things simple. In fact, there's an option in the advanced menu to spin up DoT. The benefit for me is that while page loads aren't technically any faster, they seem like they are because - for cached DNS - the round trip to your router and back to client is internal and at the speed of your network ( <= 1usec rather than msec to whomever youre using now), then non-cached queries bypass the googles, etc and go straight the the Authoritative servers they use without anyone paying any attention/noting what IP addy is looking up what webpage (if your ad blocking fails or gets disabled for whatever reason, you'll get strange ads, possibly from other countries)