GPU mode – this Armoury Crate section is labeled GPU Power Saving, but honestly it doesn’t make much sense to be called like this. It’s not clear to me if the Windows plans are completely ignored when using ASUS’s plans, or if just some settings are overwritten. Nothing to complain about here.īesides these three ASUS-specific performance profiles there’s the option to customize one or more Manual profiles, and you can even revert to Windows’s power plans. Also, your choice is remembered for both plugged-in and on-battery states. There’s even a dedicated keyboard shortcut that switches between Silent, Performance (default), and Turbo. You can move the panels around and turn them On or Off. On the right side of the interface, you’ll see a bunch of panels, including CPU stats (frequency, usage, temperature, voltage), GPU stats (chip frequency, usage, temperature, memory frequency, voltage, maximum TGP value, and GPU power saving mode currently active), Memory and Storage plus quite a few others. Performance profiles – on a laptop, it’s pretty amazing that you get the option to control CPU power limits, GPU max temperature target & overclocking, fan profiles, MUX switch configuration, and display panel overdrive. While I wish Armoury Crate was a much better piece of software, I do reckon it does a few things well.
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