Browser Assist

A router-side copilot that starts with login, then guides the port forwarding task.

RouterWiz Browser Assist should not feel like a generic chatbot and not like a remote-control tool. It should first help the user reach the correct router login page, understand what credentials the page expects, and only then guide menu navigation, field entry, and public-side verification.

Browser Assist

How Browser Assist should connect to the website

Browser Assist should feel like the next step after RouterWiz already knows the problem, the router family, or the exact values the user needs to type.

Strong handoff points from the web tools

Router Login Helper

Use Browser Assist when the user still cannot tell which router page to open or which device password label matters.

Open Login Helper

Port Forwarding Wizard

Use it after the wizard already generated Service Name, Protocol, and port values, but the user still needs menu guidance inside the router.

Open Wizard

Port Checker

If the port still looks closed after saving a rule, Browser Assist can help confirm whether the rule was added in the correct router and menu path.

Open Port Checker

DDNS Hostname Checker

Once the hostname looks correct again, Browser Assist can move the user back into the router page to finish the port and NAT path side.

Open DDNS Checker
Router page
  • Current router login or settings page
  • Vendor-specific menu names
  • Fields such as Internal IP, Port, or Protocol
  • The user stays inside the admin UI
RouterWiz side panel
  • Detected router family and current step
  • What to do right now
  • Which menu to click next
  • Exact values to type
  • Warnings before saving
  • Verification after save

What Browser Assist should complete

  • Get the user into the correct router first.
  • Guide them to the correct menu path without guessing.
  • Map RouterWiz values into the router form fields.
  • Hand off straight into Port Checker or troubleshooting after save.

What this product should do well

  • Get the user into the right router first, especially when an ISP gateway and a second router are both present.
  • Keep the user inside the router admin page instead of forcing constant tab-switching.
  • Translate confusing vendor menu names such as Virtual Server, NAT Forwarding, Port Mapping, or Applications into one guided task flow.
  • Explain where to find admin credentials safely, including router labels, reset warnings, and password-vs-Wi-Fi differences.
  • Show router-ready values for Service Name, Protocol, External Port, Internal IP, and Internal Port.
  • Hand the user back to Port Checker, troubleshooting, or Local Agent when the rule still does not work.

Core session flow

  1. Start from RouterWiz Wizard or open Browser Assist directly on a router login or admin page.
  2. Detect whether the current page belongs to the correct router, and whether it is a login page, gateway page, or settings page.
  3. Explain what credentials to use or where to look for them before asking the user to guess.
  4. Ask what the user is trying to finish: reach the right router, open a port, fix a failed port, or find the right menu.
  5. Guide the user one step at a time until the rule is saved, then hand off to verification.

What the side panel should contain

  • Detected router family, gateway, or likely router profile
  • Current login state and likely credential type
  • Current step and confidence level
  • Next menu path to click
  • Recommended values with copy actions
  • Warnings such as Double NAT suspicion or RDP exposure risk
  • Quick actions for Port Checker, Wizard, AI Assistant, and Local Agent

Trust and safety rules

  • Never store router admin passwords.
  • Do not read password fields or transmit them to a server.
  • Do not auto-change router settings in the MVP.
  • Ask for router-page access only when the user explicitly opens help on a router page.