Hi zokker13,
thank you for the screenshots. Sometimes it's hard to tell what exactly seems to be the reason for an issue without some informations being provided, but there's no need to excuse. With your Internet connection speed you should be able to have a VPN tunnel running faster than yours does.
You wrote "I'm not sure which protocol I'm using. Where is that information?". I can see from your first screenshot that you are using the tcp protocol indeed, which most likely is the reason for a slower connection. You have a checkmark next to "TCP Konfigurationsdateien herunterladen", remove that and use the button below to update your configuration. This will make your OpenVPN tunnels use the udp protocol, which is the standard setting.
Using tcp does add a lot of overhead, as every packet that gets routed via VPN will then indirectly have transfer control, which is not desireable für udp data. A tunnel is capable of routing tcp and udp packets, regardless of the tunnel being run with udp or tcp protocol, but when using tcp for your tunnel you will end up with tcp beeing used even for udp packets running through it, and an additional layer of tcp for your tcp packets. As I explained in my post above, this is not desireable unless the udp tunnel does not work and there is no other option. Using a VPN server with a tcp tunnel which is located far away does decrease the tunnel speed even more, as packet travel time increases and client and server are witing for acknowledgements for the tcp packets beeing sent.
One more important thing: Of course it always helps using a VPN server which is geographically located close to you. Having data to travel around the world there and back doesn't help speeding things up.