

I have a new z390 board and RGB Fusion seems to have updated quite a bit as well. Make sure you read the readme, it gives install instructions and please give me feedback, I am not going to do anything more with it, unless people ask as it does what I need it to. Best of all, if you set all the profiles you want/need you can delete RGB Fusion and it can work separately from that. So in directly my tool and iCue sync together and they place nice together. I have iCue doing the same thing with different iCue profiles for different games. In all you create RGB profiles in RGB Fusion, you name the profile after a process you want it to trigger on, then it changes the lights. It isn't polished like iCue, though it does everything I want it to. I wrote a tool that does the same thing for Gigabyte's Motherboards. I liked how CUE could sync the profiles to the games I played. When I got my Z370 Gaming 7, I was a little let down by RGB Fusion, as I already used CUE for my K70 Keyboard.

ICue was officially released a month ago, it is off to a great start adopting many features from CUE and Link. If not, will iCue and RGB Fusion play nicely together, or are they gonna step on each other's toes? I'm wondering, can iCue somehow control these motherboard LEDs? After playing around with iCue, it would appear not, but I don't know if maybe I was missing something.

Gigabyte has software called RGB Fusion that will let me manipulate them. I have a Gigabyte X299 AORUS Gaming 7 motherboard that has several RGB LEDs.
