DS224+

Synology

DS224+

65 positive 0 neutral 19 negative

Based on 84 Reddit mentions

$339.99

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Sentiment summary across the product areas Reddit users mention most.

Reddit mentions

Original Reddit posts and comments behind this analysis.

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Plex streams fine but the libraries take forever to load on every device, any advice on how to fix?

i always kept the plex data folder on a ssd and currently a NVMe drive now and never really saw any lag for the interface or when opening the media compared to when it was installed on spinning drives. Try doing a database clean up and increasing the DB cache size a little (Mine is currently at 256)

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nickichi84 in r/PleX

September 8, 2025 6:30 PM

14

Phone/computer back ups + media

Yeah this is totally doable and not overkill. A 2-bay NAS (like Synology DS224+) with HDDs is enough, SSD NAS is unnecessary unless you want speed over cost. Use Immich for photos and Plex or Jellyfin for movies on TVs. You can keep it off most of the time, but realistically once you start using it,

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Disastrous_Dingo_fr in r/selfhosted

May 4, 2026 5:05 PM

3

Running Plex directly on an NAS or off my Computer

I have a Synology DS224+ with 24TBx2. I keep my media around 1-3gb per hour of footage (usually 1080p). It can easily serve 3 direct play streams while barely making a dent to my overhead. I can also confirm 2 simultaneous transcodes without a hitch. Transcoding a movie (say 3gb) yields about a 15%

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c0deman-guy in r/PleX

January 3, 2026 1:07 AM

2

Autobackup between NAS's

I'm happy I could help! If you keep both your NAS devices up and running and online, yes, you can access them whenever you want from wherever. A strong password, 2FA and you shouldn't have to worry about anything. The DS224+ might seem like a good model, but it has an outdated Intel Celeron J4125 CP

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Ana_Lixandru in r/synologynas

March 19, 2026 5:04 PM

2

Need some advice on NAS and streaming

The Synology DS223 can be used for media playback, but its CPU isn't as powerful as the next model up. I would personally step up to the DS224+, DS225+ or DS425+ since they both have CPU's with transcoding abilities which can allow for smoother playback on more devices, regardless of the video file

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StatisticianNeat6778 in r/HomeNAS

January 10, 2026 9:18 PM

2

Advice on setup

I started the same way as you did about a decade ago.. ITX MB, small CPU, couple of disks.. But soon I've soon realised it's much simpler to buy readymade NAS. Anything exposed to the internet 24/7 I know I cannot protect as good as any decent company. If you give it some thought, they will save you

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Zesty_overtone in r/selfhosted

October 28, 2025 1:54 PM

2

Mini PC for homeserver

For a NAS, I'd be wary of having all the connections be through USB. For your price range, I'd probably look for something like a used Synology DS224+ or something. Edit: Actually, now that I think about it, you could probably turn one of these into an all NVMe type NAS with 2 slots. That would be i

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e11310 in r/MiniPCs

November 28, 2025 2:08 PM

1

Media servers

My server runs on a Synology DS224+ with two 6TB drives in RAID 1, so I have 6TB total storage. The DS224+ can run Plex well enough for my purposes. The whole setup cost me $670 and sits on a shelf next to my wifi router. I have about 200GB of movies and numerous other things backed up onto it, and

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Pheonix_Knight in r/PleX

December 5, 2025 12:18 AM

1

I need some advice for what storage I need

For 3TB growing to 4-5TB and wanting remote access without cloud costs, a simple 2-bay NAS (like Synology DS224+) with two 4TB drives in RAID 1 gives you redundancy, remote access, and room to grow. It's more upfront cost than an external drive but way more reliable long-term.

dennisthetennis404 in r/datastorage

February 16, 2026 12:53 AM

1

Recommendations of NAS to backup my photography work?

I started with a ds224+ 2bay nas. This is my first Nas and I've had no issues other than occasional user error type problems. 2bay is fine but if it's in your budget go for a 4 bay for future proofing. I have two 6tb drives in SHR configuration (Synology's equivalent to RAID1 but allows you to easil

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ElectionDisastrous49 in r/HomeNAS

March 16, 2026 5:15 PM

1

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