![]() So, for example, if you’re using the white preset (see below), your lights will flash white and occasionally purple. This toggle will only add those purple flashes to your existing pattern. However, it will flash in a vibrant purple that still looks pretty rad. Technically, hue lights are incapable of emitting the UV-A light that regular black lights can. Black Light: This will add black light flashes to your strobe pattern, though that’s a bit of a misnomer.Enabling this toggle will randomize the order that your lights blink in. Random Order: By default, Strobe mode will flash your lights in the same order.If you enable this toggle, the app will automatically pick the options on this screen, changing the settings periodically. The second option is an Auto-Disco toggle. Mix will randomly choose one of these two transitions each time the lights change color. Smooth will gradually fade from one color to the next. One is an unlabeled drop-down that lets you choose between Smooth, Snap, and Mix. ![]() You’ll also see two options below the Colorful slider. If you drag it all the way to the right, your lights will display deep reds, blues, greens, and whatever other colors you’ve included in the Disco Theme section. If you drag it to the left, you’ll get white lights with just a hint of color. ![]() Colorful: This slider will adjust the saturation of the colors you see.Brightness: This adjusts how bright your lights will light up. You can drag both ends of this slider to set a brightness range, if you’d like some variety in your lights.Tap it and you can choose from other color themes like 80’s Disco or Reggae, or create your own themes. Below the gradient handles, you’ll see a drop down menu. You can drag each end to just the portion of the gradient that you want to limit your lights to. If your party has a certain color scheme going, this lets you coordinate your lights with your decorations. Disco Theme: Here, you’ll see a gradient slider that shows which colors your lights will cycle through. By default, this slider shows the full rainbow of colors.Ideally, if you can strike the right balance, you’ll be able to set this and forget it during your party. Change Amount: This slider determines how much the lights change. While Basic Disco Mode is active, you’ll notice that this slider reacts to your ambient audio just like the microphone sensitivity. By adjusting this and the microphone sensitivity sliders, you can tweak the rhythm that your lights change to match your music.Note, this doesn’t change how often the lights change, just whether or not they change. If it’s below, there won’t be any change at all. If the volume is above the level you set, the lights will cycle through colors. In Basic Disco Mode, this will determine whether or not your lights change. Microphone Sensitivity. This slider adjusts how sensitive the microphone is.However, you can do a whole lot more and make your party look awesome by tweaking a few settings. Here are the settings on the disco mode screen (the left screenshot above) and what they do. If you don’t care too much about crafting a particular look for your lights, you can tap one of these buttons to start cycling your lights and it will look pretty good. This lets your lights automatically adjust to the music, but it might take some tweaking to make it look right. When the volume in the room reaches a certain decibel level, your lights will change colors. This will start cycling your colors in Disco Mode using your microphone to determine when to change colors. Basic Disco Mode: On the right, you’ll see a blue button with a play symbol on it.Strobe: This button, labeled with a lightning symbol, will enter a fast-paced strobe cycle. By default, strobe mode will flash white, but you can change the colors and even a faux black light (which is really just purple, but hey it looks cool.). ![]() The only downside is that if you switch up the music to something slower or faster, you’ll need to readjust Hue Disco every time. This is an easy way to set the color cycle to match your music. The faster you tap the button, the higher the BPM and the faster the lights will change colors. To enter this mode, tap the BPM button several times. Beats Per Minute (BPM): This mode will cycle your colors in Disco Mode based on a set rhythm.
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