WEY is a Swiss precision-engineering firm with a forty-year-plus track record in mission-critical KVM and video-wall integrations. Their pitch is built on hardware-based, OS-independent reliability for 24/7 environments where software updates, operating-system patch cycles, and cybersecurity concerns drive the architecture decision. Craft Wall is the opposite philosophy: standard commodity Linux, regular updates, no proprietary FPGA silicon. The honest comparison turns on what risk profile the buyer is solving for.
What WEY sells
The smartVISUAL platform is a complete hardware-software stack: WEY-branded receivers and master units, integrated KVM matrix endpoints, web-based smartVISUAL Editor for layout and operator workflow, and full redundancy options at every tier. The marketing copy emphasises "completely hardware-based solution" — a deliberate contrast against software- on-commodity-Linux competitors. Typical deployments are trading floors, energy dispatch centres, transport control rooms (airports, rail), and military command and control.
Pricing posture
WEY does not publish list pricing. Procurement notes from European tenders and reseller signals put typical smartVISUAL deployments in the €150,000-500,000 range depending on receiver / source count and redundancy tier — comparable to or higher than Barco CTRL on the same scale. The pricing reflects Swiss engineering margins and the long support tail (15 to 20 years lifecycle commitments are common).
Where Craft Wall is different
- Software vs hardware stack. Craft Wall is a single software product on standard Linux. WEY is an integrated hardware-plus-software family with WEY-specific receivers and master boxes at every endpoint.
- BOM by orders of magnitude. €2,500 perpetual licence plus a commodity GPU server for Craft Wall lands at roughly €8,000-15,000 total for a comparable canvas. WEY's equivalent deployment is 15-50× that figure.
- Open vendor pool. Craft Wall uses standard NVIDIA GPUs, standard Linux servers, any HDMI display. WEY's stack is closed-loop — the receivers, master unit and management plane all come from WEY. Replacement parts are sourced through WEY's channel.
- Update cadence. Craft Wall ships regular software updates the customer's IT team applies on standard maintenance windows. WEY hardware ships with extremely conservative firmware updates — by design, since "completely hardware-based" is the differentiator.
Where WEY is the better fit
- Tenders that explicitly require FPGA-based or hardware-based AV switching for cybersecurity reasons. Some Swiss, German and Austrian critical-infrastructure tenders include this language; WEY meets it natively.
- Trading floor or financial dealing rooms where the audit position is "no software updates touch the wall-control path during market hours". The smartVISUAL design lets the procurement team stand behind that statement honestly.
- Defence and intelligence environments where the Swiss jurisdiction itself is a procurement criterion (neutral country, strong export-control framework). WEY's Unterägeri headquarters is the literal answer to that requirement.
- Customers buying for 15-20 year deployment horizons with explicit spares-and-support commitments at year-15. WEY's industrial pricing buys this; software vendors on commodity hardware can't make the same guarantee structurally.
Where Craft Wall is the better fit
- Mid-budget control rooms (€20-80k BOM) where WEY's pricing is simply out of reach but the operator workflow requirements are comparable.
- Deployments where source mix is dynamic — adding NDI, new RTSP cameras, browser dashboards on a regular cadence. WEY's tightly coupled hardware-software stack makes that kind of evolution more expensive than it should be.
- Customers comfortable with standard Linux operations practices and the normal software update cycle that comes with that.
One honest review-trail caveat
WEY has very thin public review coverage on G2, TrustRadius, AVIXA forums or Reddit r/AV. This is not a product issue — most of WEY's customers are deep-relationship enterprise / defence / regulated-industry buyers who do not post reviews. The practical consequence: due diligence on WEY has to lean on direct reference calls rather than the usual review-aggregator sweep. Plan that into the evaluation timeline.
Other comparisons
- Craft Wall vs Barco TransForm N / CTRL
- Craft Wall vs Datapath WallControl
- Craft Wall vs Black Box Emerald DESKVUE
Request a like-for-like comparison
Tell us about your configuration — we'll show how Craft Wall covers the same need as WEY smartVISUAL. We respond within one business day.