S18 Gaming Mouse Software Top — Aula
For a budget gaming mouse (usually $15–25), the Aula S18 software does everything you’d expect: RGB control, macros, DPI tuning. It won’t win design awards, but it’s functional. The lack of onboard memory is the biggest flaw. If you need portable settings, spend more on a SteelSeries or Logitech. Otherwise, for one-PC use, this software is a solid 7/10 — just be careful where you download it.
Final tip: After installing, disable “Run at startup” unless you need macros every boot. The mouse works fine without the software (default DPI cycles still work).
Most gamers ignore this tab. Don’t. The software lets you switch between 125Hz, 250Hz, 500Hz, and 1000Hz. aula s18 gaming mouse software top
Warning: If your CPU is older (Intel 7th gen or earlier), 1000Hz can eat 5-10% of your CPU in games like Warzone. Drop to 500Hz to stabilize your frame rate without losing fluidity.
Out of the box, the S18 cycles through 800/1600/2400/3200/6400 DPI. But the software unlocks 100-6400 DPI in increments of 100. For a budget gaming mouse (usually $15–25), the
The Calibration Ritual:
Rating: ⭐⭐⭐½ (3.5/5)
If you own the Aula S18 (often bundled with the Aula F75 keyboard or sold as a budget gaming mouse), the software is essential for unlocking its full potential. Here’s the honest breakdown:
When you launch the software (usually from a desktop shortcut named "AULA Gaming Mouse"), you will see four to six tabs. Here is the breakdown of the Top settings you need to master. Most gamers ignore this tab
| Tab Name | Function | Top Feature | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Main Setting | Button assignment | Disable side buttons for FPS | | Performance | DPI & Polling Rate | 5 customizable DPI stages | | Backlight | RGB Control | Off, Breathing, Neon, Spectrum | | Macro Editor | Key recording | Loop counts & delay insertion | | DPI Color | Indicator lights | Match RGB to DPI speed | | System | Firmware updates | Reset to factory defaults |