Glad you guys are liking VA. I use it for just about every game I play, including RoF, DCS, FSX, etc.
The nice thing about the paid version is that you can have as many "profiles" (ie. command sets) as you want *and* you can even nest them....
So, for instance, in my case, VA starts up when Windows does, and it loads a Default Profile automatically... In there, I keep generic Windows stuff like (Press F1... Start TrackIR, Start Teamspeak, Shutdown PC, Press Enter, Load Profile "prof-name", etc.)
Then my game profile inherits from the generic one, so for instance, I don't have make new commands for function keys in my DCS Profile, as they're already inherited from the Default Profile. With that in mind, my DCS profile is for generic DCS commands (show the scoreboard, default assignments like flaps and landing gear, default views, etc). Then for each aircraft I have a profile for that (ie. Load Aircraft Hornet or Viggen, or whichever plane you're flying). That profile has the specific stuff for that particular aircraft which is real handy for organizing, and changing stuff for a particular plane. One nice thing about that approach is: Say, the Hornet uses a different key assignment for "Gear Down" - the plane specific command will override the generic one (since that profile was loaded later than the default one), so I can use the exact same command and it works as expected.
Finally, and this is another feature I love, you can Use VA to do other VA commands in a profile... Here's a fun Hornet example I use. I have commands for extending / retracting speedbrakes, catapult launch bar, refueling probe, etc. So, if I want to make a "4 Down Check" command that extends the cat bar, fueling probe, speedbrakes and tail hook, that command just has to refer to the already made commands for each of those operations, without having to actually re-define all the individual keypresses. Just say "4 Down Check", and it does the whole shebang. Say "4 Down Complete" and it goes ahead and retracts them all again. Handy...
Like the tagline for the computer language Perl, I find that VA lets you do simple stuff very easily (like simple keypress combinations), but it also makes some pretty complicated stuff possible as well....
It's without a doubt the best $10 I ever spent on computer software, bar none.
Once again, I'm glad you guys are starting to experiment with VA... Pretty soon, you'll wonder how you ever got along without it -- I find it as indispensable now as trackIR (or equiv).
Cheers,
4 ~S!~