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Armoury Crate
ASUS’s all-in-one control platform for ROG and TUF Gaming hardware — Aura Sync RGB, performance mode switching, fan curve control, real-time hardware monitoring, driver updates, and game profiles. One installer, every ASUS device.
✓ Official ASUS support page
Not just an RGB app — it’s the entire ASUS control layer.
Armoury Crate is what ASUS built to replace the old scatter of standalone utilities — separate apps for fans, separate apps for RGB, separate driver updaters — with one unified control center. If you own a ROG Strix, ROG Maximus, or TUF Gaming motherboard, an ASUS ROG GPU, a ROG laptop, or any ASUS-branded peripheral, Armoury Crate is the intended management layer for all of it. It handles RGB synchronization via Aura Sync, performance mode switching, custom fan curves, real-time CPU and GPU monitoring, driver and firmware update notifications, per-game hardware profiles, and it ships with Aura Creator as a bundled module for advanced lighting programming.
The installation model is an online installer — the ZIP you download is a small bootstrapper that fetches the specific modules your hardware needs during setup. That means the full install size varies depending on what ASUS devices you have connected, and it requires an active internet connection without VPN during the initial install. After that, the software runs locally with no persistent connection required.
One thing worth knowing upfront: Armoury Crate installs a kernel-level Windows driver called ASUS System Control Interface (ASCI). This is the component that creates a low-level communication channel between the software and your hardware’s firmware layer — it’s what makes direct fan curve control, hardware monitoring below the OS, and Aura Sync’s persistence possible. It’s a legitimate driver and not optional if you want full functionality, but it’s good to know it exists before you install.
Five modes that actually change hardware behavior — not just names.
These aren’t just renamed Windows power plans. Each mode adjusts CPU and GPU TDP limits, fan ramp curves, and acoustic targets simultaneously. The differences between Silent and Turbo on a ROG Crosshair X670E or a TUF Gaming Z790-Plus build are measurable at the wall socket.
Aura Sync vs. Aura Creator — what’s actually different.
Aura Sync is the synchronization layer built directly into Armoury Crate. It handles lighting modes — Static, Breathing, Strobing, Color Cycle, Rainbow, Reactive, and Comet — and applies them uniformly across all Aura-compatible devices connected to your system. That covers ROG Strix and Maximus motherboards, ROG and TUF Gaming GPUs, compatible DDR5/DDR4 memory (including G.Skill Trident Z5 RGB and Corsair Dominator via third-party SDK bridges), ROG keyboards, mice, headsets, and any device plugged into the board’s ARGB headers. Single-mode sync is entirely managed inside Armoury Crate, no separate app needed.
Aura Creator is the advanced layer — a separate module downloadable from within Armoury Crate, using a video-timeline-style interface for building multi-layer, sequenced lighting effects. If you want effects that trigger on game events, react to audio in a specific way, or run as multi-zone choreographed sequences with independent timings per device, that’s what Aura Creator is for. It’s not necessary for most users, but for anyone who wants genuinely custom lighting beyond preset modes it’s a capable tool that ASUS doesn’t document particularly well.
Which ASUS app does what — and which ones you actually need.
ASUS has more software products than most people realize, and there’s genuine overlap. Here’s a clear breakdown so you don’t end up with four different apps fighting each other.
| App | Primary Use | RGB Control | Perf. Modes | Fan Curves | Who Needs It |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Armoury Crate | All-in-one hardware hub | YES (Aura Sync) | YES | YES | All ROG / TUF Gaming users |
| Aura Creator | Advanced RGB programming | YES (advanced) | NO | NO | Enthusiasts wanting custom sequences |
| Armoury Crate SE | Peripherals-only lightweight version | PARTIAL | NO | NO | Users who only want keyboard/mouse control |
| GPU Tweak III | Desktop GPU overclocking | PARTIAL | NO | YES (GPU only) | Desktop users wanting OC control for ROG GPU |
| MyASUS | Laptops, warranty, support | NO | LIMITED | NO | ASUS laptop users (consumer, not ROG/TUF) |
| OpenRGB | Cross-vendor RGB control | YES (multi-brand) | NO | NO | Mixed-vendor builds (ASUS + Corsair + MSI etc.) |
* Armoury Crate SE is the right choice if you have ASUS peripherals but no ROG/TUF motherboard or laptop — it’s a fraction of the size and skips all the hardware monitoring and performance tuning modules.
How to install correctly — and avoid the common traps.
Armoury Crate’s online installer model catches people off guard. It looks like a small download, but it fetches the actual components during setup. Read through before running it.
ArmouryCrateInstallTool.zip from the button above, which links to ASUS’s official support page. Go to your specific motherboard or laptop model’s support page for the board-specific version if you experience detection issues with the generic installer.ArmouryCrateInstaller.exe as administrator. The installer will present a choice: Armoury Crate only, Aura Creator only, or both. Select both unless you have a specific reason not to — Aura Creator adds about 200 MB and doesn’t run unless you open it.The honest version — reputation, real issues, and when to skip it.
Armoury Crate has a worse community reputation than its actual functionality warrants, but the complaints aren’t baseless. The most documented flashpoint is ASUS’s UEFI-based auto-reinstall behavior — the firmware itself can trigger a Windows installer prompt after a clean OS install, which users rightly find overreaching. Some boards pushed seasonal pop-ups via Armoury Crate (christmas.exe in 2024 generated significant community backlash on Reddit and OSnews because it looked exactly like malware). ASUS has since toned down that behavior, but the damage to the software’s reputation was real.
There was also a legitimate privilege escalation vulnerability in the Armoury Crate Service component disclosed in 2024 — a real security flaw that allowed local attackers to escalate privileges via the kernel driver. ASUS patched it, but it reinforced why keeping the software updated matters rather than running an old version indefinitely. If you’re running a version from 2023 or earlier, updating is worth doing.
On the functional side: detection reliability on Z690 and Z790 boards has been inconsistent in various release cycles, with users on Overclock.net reporting that the software periodically stops recognizing the connected motherboard after updates, requiring the full Uninstall Tool → clean reinstall cycle. Fan curve accuracy is genuinely good and considered one of the stronger features — several users on forums mention installing Armoury Crate specifically to map fan curves once, copy the values to BIOS manually, then uninstall. That’s a reasonable approach if you want the functionality without the background process.
What Armoury Crate supports.
Armoury Crate is designed for the full ASUS ROG and TUF Gaming ecosystem. Detection extends to laptops, desktops, and standalone peripherals — all under the same installation.
What you need to run it.
Frequently asked.
Download
| Utility | Version | Size | Last Updated |
|---|---|---|---|
| Armoury Crate & Aura Creator Installer | 3.2.12.0 (Armoury Crate 6.0.0) | 1.52 MB | 2026/01/15 |
| Armoury Crate Full Installation Package | 1.5.0.7 (Armoury Crate 6.0.0) | 4.99 GB | 2026/01/15 |
| Armoury Crate SE Installer | 3.3.0.0 | 2.18 MB | 2025/12/23 |
| Armoury Crate Uninstall Tool | 2.3.0.0 | 1.21 MB | 2026/01/09 |
| Armoury Crate Lite Log Tool | 1.2.0.0 | 190 KB | 2025/11/18 |