Thursday, February 9th 2023
CORSAIR Launches iCUE Murals Lighting, a State-of-the-Art RGB Customization Software
CORSAIR, a world leader in enthusiast components for gamers, creators, and PC builders, today introduced iCUE Murals Lighting, a groundbreaking software for creating incredibly immersive lighting effects in CORSAIR iCUE. This powerful feature enables you to use images, video, and even on-screen visuals as colorful templates to produce imaginative, mesmerizing lightscapes. With Murals, your desktop - and entire game room - comes alive with dazzling, custom-created RGB.
Murals Lighting is an intuitive, interactive tool that enables users to quickly create custom RGB lighting effects in iCUE like never before. Upload any image, GIF, or video to Murals, and then place your RGB devices over it on-screen to create astonishing visuals across your setup. The platform is simple, easy to use, and surprisingly fun as you watch your gaming space burst to life with each new effect.Nearly any static or moving image file format works in Murals, so you can choose from your favorite videos or background images - or even match on-screen games or media in real-time - to produce completely unique lighting effects. From Pac-Man and pixel art running across your keyboard and ambient lighting, to animations and audio visualizers pulsing throughout your PC, you can let your creativity run wild with Murals.
Murals Lighting grants you the ability to extend your RGB light show beyond your desktop, filling your entire room in radiant RGB. Thanks to partnerships with smart lighting ecosystems such as Philips Hue and Nanoleaf, you can control your game room's wall panels, smart light bulbs, and more in iCUE - and when combined with Murals, your system, ambient lighting, and walls are set aglow in a multi-dimensional lightscape of color and effects.
"We're thrilled to introduce iCUE Murals, a revolutionary leap in full-system interactive lighting control and personalization," said Thi La, President and COO of CORSAIR. "Our team has had a lot of fun with this software, and we have already seen some amazing room lighting setups from our community using Murals in beta. We can't wait to see what both newcomers and experienced users can do with Murals to create their unique lightscape."
With such unlimited lighting customization options now available on your RGB palette, you can color your world with Murals Lighting.
For more information, visit this page.
Murals Lighting is an intuitive, interactive tool that enables users to quickly create custom RGB lighting effects in iCUE like never before. Upload any image, GIF, or video to Murals, and then place your RGB devices over it on-screen to create astonishing visuals across your setup. The platform is simple, easy to use, and surprisingly fun as you watch your gaming space burst to life with each new effect.Nearly any static or moving image file format works in Murals, so you can choose from your favorite videos or background images - or even match on-screen games or media in real-time - to produce completely unique lighting effects. From Pac-Man and pixel art running across your keyboard and ambient lighting, to animations and audio visualizers pulsing throughout your PC, you can let your creativity run wild with Murals.
Murals Lighting grants you the ability to extend your RGB light show beyond your desktop, filling your entire room in radiant RGB. Thanks to partnerships with smart lighting ecosystems such as Philips Hue and Nanoleaf, you can control your game room's wall panels, smart light bulbs, and more in iCUE - and when combined with Murals, your system, ambient lighting, and walls are set aglow in a multi-dimensional lightscape of color and effects.
"We're thrilled to introduce iCUE Murals, a revolutionary leap in full-system interactive lighting control and personalization," said Thi La, President and COO of CORSAIR. "Our team has had a lot of fun with this software, and we have already seen some amazing room lighting setups from our community using Murals in beta. We can't wait to see what both newcomers and experienced users can do with Murals to create their unique lightscape."
With such unlimited lighting customization options now available on your RGB palette, you can color your world with Murals Lighting.
For more information, visit this page.
24 Comments on CORSAIR Launches iCUE Murals Lighting, a State-of-the-Art RGB Customization Software
Icue is a deal breaker for me. Lost me as a customer. I wont buy ANY other corsair product that uses this crap.
FYI: There's a cool program called JackNet that allows you to control ANY product connected to your motherboards addressable header through the iCue software. Currently I'm controlling an Asus motherboard, G.Skill RAM, Montech fans, a Sapphire videocard and generic addressable LED strips through iCue.
'nuff said :D
Why do i get the feeling they bought out another company and re-named their software, bodged up a link to icue and released as-is
straight up ripped offimitated SignalRGB canvas concept as a form of flattery lmaoYou probably already know JackNet reached end of dev life and its spiritual successor's (SignalRGB) team includes Jack himself along with some others, just thought I'd mention it just in case.
openrgb-wiki.readthedocs.io/en/latest/History-of-OpenRGB/
I don't know when SignalRGB entered the scene, first I heard of it was on a youtube ad long after I was using openrgb already. Whichever actually came first I still prefer openrgb because it's fully open and very lightweight. I never tried SignalRGB but, besides the fremium model, a simple google search tells me in the first results that it's about as bad as icue, aura, etc. the only advantage being you only need a single program to control everything.
Time to ditch third party softwares is approaching just use and tell people about OpenRGB - its free and staying that way
Sorry for the flame, but it was not just about RGB controlling software.
The amount of people who didn't even know that even in 10 you can right click the start menu and get shortcuts to most of those things people claim are now hidden, just because one of many methods to access the settings changed and that's the only one they knew of