
These key mapping options are extensive, as seen above, and include a plethora of shortcuts for specific Adobe software in addition to OBS Studio and DaVinci Resolve that will interest many content creators too. The Mountain MacroPad and DisplayPad share a lot in common in that they both have twelve assignable keys, which Base Camp now allows you to map/re-map accordingly. I have seen this trend before with larger brands, and want to encourage Mountain to consider adopting a modular approach to its software, given the bloat seen in other peripheral software drivers recently. The installer does not tell you how much storage space it needs, but mine took up 397 MB once finished, which is reasonable, considering it is otherwise light on system resources and yet higher than the 345 MB in previous versions. The install process is self-explanatory, and I will give props to Mountain for giving more options than most, including the preferred language for the program and an option to run it with system boot-up. The installer file is ~240 MB in size-a sizable increase over the ~160 MB the last time we saw it earlier this year.

Given that these keypads had not been announced at the time of testing, Mountain provided me with the beta release version 1.2.1, with a public release v1.2.3 scheduled for when the products are announced.

Software drivers for the Mountain MacroPad and DisplayPad come in the form of the aptly-named Base Camp program, whose installer can be found on this page.
