Wallpaper Engine vs. Lively Wallpaper: Can free be better?


I don’t think I’m alone in my desire to spruce up my Windows 11 desktop. Live wallpapers are the Ritz of customization options. Nothing is worse than having a perfectly cable-managed PC setup with matching accessories, lighting, and room accents, only to have a boring default Windows wallpaper. 

If you’re looking for the crème de la crème of wallpaper options on the market, these are the two applications worth checking out. But do you really need to shell out $4 for Wallpaper Engine, or is Lively Wallpaper punching above its weight class? Let’s take a look. 

Wallpaper Engine vs Lively Wallpaper: Features

Wallpaper engine admittedly has more tweakable performance options than Lively Wallpaper.  (Image credit: Wallpaper Engine Team.)

Before you drop down the $4 for Wallpaper Engine on Steam, let’s take a look at the features available with Lively Wallpaper compared to Wallpaper Engine. 

Swipe to scroll horizontally
Header Cell – Column 0 Wallpaper Engine Lively Wallpaper
Performance Will pause during games 0% resource usage when running games/work
Screen support Multiple displays and 16:9, 21:9, 16:10, 4:3 aspect ratios Supports multiple displays and aspect ratios
Supported Wallpaper inputs Create your own animated wallpapers Hardware Accelerated Video Playback, any video can be a wallpaper
Extra features Steam Workshop wallpapers for free Set any website as a wallpaper
Row 4 – Cell 0 Supports interactive wallpapers Lively Audio API to have wallpaper react to audio
Row 5 – Cell 0 Supports HTML, images, or video files Lively System API to show system information
Price $3.99 on Steam Open Source and free

Wallpaper Engine vs Lively Wallpaper: Using the apps

Both apps come with pre-loaded live wallpaper options. (Image credit: Future)

It’s pretty hard to judge the difference between the usability of the apps and the overall GUI experience. I prefer the simplicity and layout of LIvely Wallpaper more. Still, Wallpaper Engine has many more options to help you find exactly what you’re looking for, and the ‘Discover’ tab in Wallpaper Engine is a huge bonus. 

Besides a few basic pre-loaded wallpapers that come with Lively Wallpaper, any other wallpapers you want to use must come from outside the app. This is a bit of a bummer compared to Wallpaper Engine and does require a bit more work, but in the long run, it means it supports a vast range of different inputs, such as websites, YouTube videos, and nearly all video files. If you’re looking for ideas or help with Lively Wallpaper, they have an active subreddit with users uploading new wallpaper creations and offering assistance in true open-source fashion. 

The Discover tab in Wallpaper Engine is its best feature.  (Image credit: Wallpaper Engine team)

If you’re looking for convenience and ease of use, Wallpaper Engine’s Discover tab does all the work for you, showcasing awesome wallpapers from different categories. It’s almost impossible not to find a great-looking Wallpaper for any taste. Of course, the Workshop tab also allows you to search for anything you are dying to place from and center on your PC setup.  


  • TL;DR app usability: While Lively Wallpaper has an overall cleaner aesthetic, in my opinion, and is very easy to drive and move around, the actual act of finding, downloading, and ‘installing’ wallpapers is much easier on Wallpaper Engine due to the Discover and Workshop tabs that feed community-created content directly into the app and offer ‘one-click shopping’ for the avid wallpaper connoisseur. 

Wallpaper Engine vs Lively Wallpaper: Performance

I was seeing 15 to 30% GPU utilization while running basic pre-installed live wallpapers from Wallpaper Engine on an RTX 4070 Super.  (Image credit: Future)

I was surprised to see how much running a live wallpaper affected my GPU. I purchased the recently reviewed NVIDIA RTX 4070 Super, and I thought I would have a ton of overhead running these live wallpapers. That doesn’t seem to be the case, though. Any live wallpaper I tried had my GPU utilization showing between 15% and 30%, but it was over 20% most of the time. This was the same across both Wallpaper Engine and Lively Wallpaper. 

Lively Wallpaper also had a pretty big ding on my GPU utilization usually sitting around 30% but sometimes getting up to 40%. (Image credit: Future)





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