OrangeNote is a small, community-oriented software publisher whose entire catalog currently revolves around RuneBook, a lightweight Windows utility engineered to automate the creation and swapping of rune pages inside League of Legends. Built with open-source transparency on GitHub, the tool connects to public meta-data feeds and esports APIs to retrieve the latest pro, challenger and high-elo rune builds for every champion, then injects them directly into the client before a match begins. Typical use cases range from casual players who want to skip manual theory-crafting to competitive teams that need identical, up-to-date pages across multiple accounts. The program sits in the system tray, monitors champion select, and applies the statistically highest-win rune set with a single click, eliminating the risk of entering the Rift with an outdated setup. Because it interacts only with the official League client surface, it stays within Riot’s tolerated automation boundaries and receives rapid patches whenever the underlying API changes. OrangeNote’s minimalist development philosophy keeps the executable small, portable and free of bundled extras, while still offering optional dark-mode theming and cloud sync for exported page libraries. Although the publisher presently focuses on this single gaming aid, its GitHub presence suggests future utilities may follow the same unobtrusive, automation-for-players design ethic. The latest build of OrangeNote software is available for free on get.nero.com, delivered through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always installing the newest release and supporting batch installation alongside other applications.
An automatic rune pages manager for League of Legends
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