I found it in the Microsoft StoreĬhange your battery settings like you want it. Uninstall MyASUS and then install it again. It seems the V1.0.31.0 that was already on my laptop was the one that made the battery management not work.
Some newer laptops will have the V2 version >= V2.2.31.0, but mine had V1.0.33.0. It should have some recent date from October or November 2020. Then scroll down to Utilities and download the thing there. Back on that support page, go through Driver & Tools -> Driver & Tools -> select your OS (Windows 10 64bit for me). Update the ASUS System Control Interface. If your ASUS laptop packs a powerful discrete graphics card (which use significant. Run that, computer restarts, a blue BIOS update screen came up, computer restarts and you're good Head to the System tab in Windows 11 Settings, find the Display settings, and locate 'Advanced display.' If your laptop boasts a high refresh rate, like 120 Hz, toning it down to 60 Hz can save battery power while still providing a pleasant viewing experience. So I just scrolled down a bit and found 'BIOS Update(Windows)' which puts it in an easy. I assume you could use the first BIOS result there if you knew what you were doing, but then you'd need to use some fancy EZ Flash Utility and stuff. Thought I'd chuck this here as well from another thread I posted inįor anyone wanting an update to this issue, there is a fix.Īs I found on a forum post, here are the steps:įind the support page for your laptop on the ASUS website and go to Driver & Tools.