Can RGB improve your gaming? ROG Lab says ‘results inconclusive, but it sure looks awesome'

ASUS Republic of Gamers (ROG) today announced a new ROG Lab initiative designed to scientifically settle once and for all the question of how RGB lighting affects gaming performance. Preliminary findings suggest RGB lighting boosts gamers’ confidence and helps them “identify as alpha players.”
“The numbers speak for themselves,” said ROG Lab’s Consumer Relations Specialist, OMNI the M.O.U.S.E. “It's unclear how, exactly, glowing lights impact your effectiveness in pressing buttons. But 69% of respondents said they felt more equipped to ‘kick ass’ when surrounded by strobing orange hues while playing Call of Duty.” He then shared a graph indicating a small group of gamers were adamant that RGB materially improved their in-game performance. “Any perceived skill boost appears to be purely psychological. Respondents told us they felt cooler with RGB on, like they were ‘in TRON.’ In turn, they entered matches with improved posture and heightened focus, indirectly boosting their kill-death ratio.”
OMNI provided another infographic indicating that while one-third of PC gamers chose to play games with RGB off, two-thirds of PC gamers were still pretty cool.
ROG Lab’s Chief Science Officer, Hugh J. Brayne — an employee mysteriously absent from company records — was more colorful in his description of his lab’s findings. Chugging energy drinks from behind an RGB-lit podium, Brayne shouted at journalists and demanded they cover the study’s early findings indicating RGB was, in fact, “super sick.”
“We’ve been asking this question since 2006,” Brayne said. “And only now is there data to back up our assertion that RGB is changing the game.” He argued harnessing light for amusement could demonstrably improve people’s lives and experiences, citing the precedent set by Thomas Edison. He then showed off an ROG Strix G’s full-surround RGB lightbar, attempting to hypnotize everyone in attendance at the conference.
At press time, one journalist questioned the necessity of Brayne's RGB podium, but he dismissed the individual and stated glowing podiums were products he would proudly stand behind.
Author
Popular Post

The ROG Raikiri II is my new go-to game controller — and I can’t put it down

Activate Beast Mode with ROG’s new EVA-02 gear, available now

If you’ve never gamed on an open-back headset, it’s time to level up your audio

The best accessories to supercharge your ROG Xbox Ally

CES 2026 was packed with new tech — here are three big ROG announcements you may have missed
LATEST ARTICLES

OpenClaw on the ROG Ally: turn your handheld into a fully local AI assistant
OpenClaw is an always-on agentic AI assistant that can do just about anything, all on a piece of hardware you host yourself.

Boosteroid adds official ROG Ally series support for optimized handheld cloud gaming
Boosteroid has partnered with ROG to make ROG Ally series handhelds the optimal way to stream all your games on the go.

Can RGB improve your gaming? ROG Lab says ‘results inconclusive, but it sure looks awesome'
ASUS Republic of Gamers (ROG) is undertaking a new ROG Lab initiative designed to scientifically settle once and for all the question of how RGB lighting affects gaming performance.

The ROG Xbox Ally takes the field at the first ever Xbox Bowl college football game
I’m not sure I ever expected to see Master Chief perform the coin toss of a college bowl game, nor watch Peely the Fortnite Banana conduct a marching band. But that’s just a small portion of what I got to witness at the first-ever Xbox Bowl.

Where to catch ROG at Gamescom 2025
ROG is doing more than just revealing wild new PC gear at Gamescom 2025 — it’s amping up the party. Check out what we're up to.

The new ROG Dev Accelerator program gives your indie game dev studio the boost it needs
Our new ROG Dev Accelerator program provides a select number of promising indie devs with the hardware they need to build their games.