![]() Set the MSI Central Service to Manual Startup: Rename the CC_Engine_圆4.exe executable (I added ".old" to the file name).From Windows Explorer, navigate to "C:\Program Files (x86)\MSI\One Dragon Center\".From Task Manager, locate and terminate the "CC_Engine_圆4" application.The management application works fine without it. I assume that the "CC" in CC_Engine_圆4.exe stands for either "Control Center" or "Cooler Controller" but who knows. I have no idea what it does besides control the fans, but it doesn't effect Dragon Center negatively when disabled. One of the two components responsible for hijacking GPU fan control is the CC_Engine_圆4.exe application. Terminate and Inhibit The "CC Engine" Application: Repeat the above steps (navigate, scan, uninstall) until all components (except Mystic Light) are removed.The DCUI will uninstall the package and restart the DCUI.Next to each package is a little trash can icon.Navigate to Support>System Info in the DCUI.The easier way might very well work just fine, but I didn't test it. ![]() The "right" way to uninstall packages is mildly tedious, and I haven't tested whether the alternative method (directly running the component uninstall packages in the C:\Program Files (x86)\MSI\One Dragon Center\ subdirectories) works without breaking the management application. Uninstall Every Other Package Besides Mystic Light: If you're using other features besides Mystic Light (i.e, User Scenario, Game Mode, cFosSpeed QoS, CPU Fan Control etc), your mileage may vary. Note: This is assuming you've uninstalled every other Dragon Center package besides Mystic Light, and you've disabled automatic updates and telemetry. This is a short guide of how I got it working. Now I'm running Mystic Light RGB effects with MSI Afterburner fan curves, and both are fully functional. I identified and disabled the two components that were hijacking MSI Afterburner's fan control with no problems. I fought with this problem for the better part of three hours and in the process I roughly figured out how the Dragon Center services, scheduled tasks and applications work together. Nor did disabling " Zero Frozr" in the Dragon Center UI (DCUI) the one time that the "Tools" menu made itself visible and available to me in the DCUI. Uninstalling the "GPU Fan Control" package didn't change this behavior. This turns out to be behavior caused by Dragon Center's GPU fan management. I don't need Dragon Center for anything but RGB control over my B550M motherboard.Īfter installing Dragon Center 2.0.86.0, I noticed that my RTX 2080 GPU fans weren't kicking on in compliance with my defined fan speed curves, but cycling on and off. Some Background: I really like Mystic Light but I also run MSI Afterburner for overclocking and GPU fan control.
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