A good review, and a fair one at that.

I think Rob did a great job with Keyclone and I think it's a great option for those looking for easy and simple multiboxing software.

That said, the highly impressive configurability of ISBoxer won me over after a year or so of happily running with Keyclone and it's been worth every cent. The sheer power of the tricky things it can do has made running my 5xPaladin team, my first all-melee team, vastly easier than it might otherwise have been.

One thing I'd change, is move the Subscription model from the Con section the to Pro section and for the same reason I had hoped Diablo III would be subscription based - it lends itself highly to the developer of the content, whatever it may be, to a process of continual improvement (a nice Six Sigma/Lean/GDF buzzword, but a true one too).

One Con I would agree with though, is the relatively sparse documentation for such a versatile and powerful program. I know there's user made tutorials, as well as Lax's own tutorials, and while they're very helpful I found the lack of complete, detailed and exhaustive documentation to be an issue, both in the intiial (and relatively steep) learning curve, and more importantly in a way, when I got comfortable with ISBoxer and started looking to do more powerful things with it.

Lax though has been always available, both here and over at ISBoxer.com and has readily, speedily and informatively answered any question I've put up there, so this Con is somewhat mitigated by that, but some in-depth doco delving right down into the nitty gritty of ISBoxer would be welcome (if such exists, please point me to it, and I'll happily stand corrected).

Props to both Rob and Lax for their software (and Jafula too for the absolutely must-have Jamba add-on).