I have soldered quite a lot of these chips manually with a Hanstar 858 hot air station and it's way way easier than soldering TQFP's and many other packages. Surface tension makes things smooth.
Important things:
-You need solderpaste and need to know how to apply it. A thin strip over each row of pads and a dot pattern in the thermal pad. The amount is somewhat critical, too much and the chip will lift or the EP's solder will overflow, too little and the thermal vias will wick it away creating voids.
-You need a hot air gun that can blow as much volume of air as possible and use it without a nozzle, or alternatively with the highest diameter nozzle you have or the one that outputs the most turbulent flow. You want lots of turbulent hot air, not a fine jet stream like some stations produce. Jets and fine nozzles are for rework, not for soldering. Here you want a constantly relplacing cushion of hot air surrounding your chip.
-You need to watch the temperature. It's important to at least hit two critical temp spots: first ramp it to 100 C for some minutes to drive off moisture, then ramp to the solvent evaporation temperature of your solderpaste (typically around 150-180C) and when the paste starts looking dull,dry and ash-like ramp it to peak temp. Never set the hot air gun above 260 C for low thermal mass PCB's or 300 C for tougher jobs. 350 C is only for rework, not for soldering the first time
-And do the job over an insulating surface, for example holding the board with a board holder with wooden clamps or over a piece of wood.