

One thing is this fight over who controls who both companies don't bother with my Sound Blaster AE-5 as I wish Corsair and MSI was like that as I don't mind have more then one program for each company. What I done for now I uninstalled Mystic Light and re-installed Corsair Link 4 and Corsair Utility Engine as MSI Gaming APP can control the LED's on the video card. It keeps disabling it whenever Dragon/Creation Center is open. The problem is having the SDK running whilst the software is running. Hopefully there will eventually some kind of industry standard for RGB stuff in general, and we’ll be able to integrate it all more easily, but not today. The GPU supports both Dragon Center and Creation Center, they were running fine a few days ago as well. Then launch the File Explorer and delete the installation directory of MSI. I can understand why they do this, as no one wants to have to support other company’s products, but it also makes for a crappy user experience unless you stick to one brand.īut Corsair and MSI have joined forces in other ways, so maybe we’ll see more integration here if we’re lucky. To cleanly install the MSI dragon center, follow these steps: From your taskbar, exit the dragon center program. Uninstall MSI Dragon Center and MSI SDK Now, restart your system, and upon restart, login to the built-in administrator account. And of course, they various softwares interfer with each other. Each company wants you to use their software to control their product’s RGB features, and they tend not to support those of other companies. The biggest problem with RGB stuff in general right now is that it’s all fractured. I ended up just uninstalling it, and everything works better now, although I have to use my z370’s default color scheme, which I happen to like anyway. It tended to cause my g.skill rgb ram’s colors to lock up regardless of whether I told it to control the color of it.

I’ve had problems with mysticlight messing with any other lighting software.
