ASUS ROG Falchion Review 9

ASUS ROG Falchion Review

Lighting & Performance »

Software


As with the ROG Claymore II, there are unified software drivers for the ROG Falchion. In fact, there are actually two separate software drivers, but the primary one is ROG Armoury Crate (notice the "u" in Armoury), which can be found on the support tab of the product page. It supports Win 10 64-bit only and downloads as a compressed folder that is just 1.3 MB. There is an executable you can then choose to install Armoury Crate, AURA Creator, the second software program, or both. At this point, it starts downloading all the necessary components and installs the two without giving you any options at all. You are forced to abide by ASUS's chosen install directory, whether there will be any desktop shortcuts, any start menu items, or more.


When you first open up either ROG Armoury Crate or AURA Creator, you are greeted to the EULA. Also note that ASUS Live Services is needed and has to be running in the background for them to work, especially for AURA Creator, which is used to better synchronize compatible AURA lighting effects across ASUS products. This results in several installed programs in Windows, a total of seven even, for 408 MB combined and more used CPU and RAM resources with everything running than I like. Both Armoury Crate and AURA Creator respond quite well to high DPI displays, which automatically makes the user experience better than many keyboard drivers I have had my hands on recently. Having a fully operational window that can be minimized, maximized, and resized is also something I will never take for granted again. Armoury Crate is where you will spend most of your time, at least when it comes to the software side of things, and there are three themes to choose from, which change the color scheme as well as certain other graphical elements. The ROG theme with the red and black colors is the default, and the TUF theme allows you to go with a yellow and black theme instead. The third is just called "ASUS" and makes for a cyan and black color scheme. Changing the theme requires a quick restart of Armoury Crate, which takes a couple of seconds at most.

The video above goes over using ROG Armoury Crate with the ROG Falchion, which clearly also illustrates how the ASUS ecosystem would work when synchronized through Armoury Crate. There are some basic options in Settings, including the ability to change the theme as pointed out earlier. I also had to do a few things before recording the video, including syncing profiles, which took more than a few minutes. In fact, that is really my main issue: Everything seems to take slightly longer than I would expect for software from a brand as large as ASUS. A few user experience tweaks would have also been appreciated, including cue tips. After a few minutes of testing, I also realized that I had to select the keyboard with AURA Sync to get any of the lighting effects to, well, take effect. Logically, AURA Sync would have me think it synchronizes the keyboard lighting with other compatible products, which should never be chosen as the default. I would have also liked the inclusion of a virtual keyboard that depicts the various lighting effects, and there are fewer effects than I expected, too. More advanced effects require you to use AURA Creator, a completely separate program.

The other options pertaining to the keyboard are well laid out. Key mapping uses an actual virtual keyboard, with options over drop-down menus on the right covering just about every need. There are up to six onboard profiles, each of which can be associated with another program or game on your system, as well as some system-level changes, including volume. Macro recording is done in a separate menu and works quite well with easy recording and editing of each step and delay, as well as the insertion of keystrokes post-recording. There are a couple of generic menus, including ads for ASUS products, an actual game store for whatever reason (probably for VIP membership with registration), and product support. The touchpad is called Touch Panel, and its settings are for further customization based on both a scrolling action and tapping three different points along the length of the pad itself.


AURA Creator works fine, but I was expecting more since I had to install a separate program for advanced lighting effects. All it does is allow for stacking lighting layers, with each layer chosen from those separately available before. It also allows for per-key lighting, and you can import/export the lighting profiles as well. I'd much rather see this integrated into Armoury Crate. That having been said, I will also point out that ASUS has managed to implement wireless Aura Sync, which is a first for such keyboards and also available with the ROG Claymore II. This is where that STM MCU with its higher performance comes in.
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Nov 25th, 2024 08:02 EST change timezone

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