Vjoy 2.1.9.1 _top_ Direct
The driver is written in kernel mode (sys). It adds less than 0.1ms of input latency. You will not notice a difference between a physical joystick and a vJoy-fed virtual one.
It remains backward compatible with older vJoy 2.x configurations. Installation & Configuration vjoy 2.1.9.1
| Problem | Solution | |---------|----------| | | Enable Test Mode: bcdedit /set testsigning on → reboot. Disable later with bcdedit /set testsigning off . | | vJoy not showing in joy.cpl | Re-run installer as Admin, disable antivirus temporarily, or reinstall after cleaning registry (use Revo Uninstaller). | | Conflicts with ViGEm (DS4Windows, Xbox controllers) | Uninstall one or use HidHide to isolate devices. | | Game doesn't see vJoy axes | Some games require the device to be the first controller. Use "HidHide" to hide real controllers from the game. | | Blue screen (BSOD) on sleep/resume | Known bug in 2.1.9.1. Avoid suspending PC while vJoy is active, or unload driver via net stop vjoy before sleep. | The driver is written in kernel mode (sys)
vJoy (Virtual Joystick) is an open-source device driver for Microsoft Windows. It allows you to create up to 16 virtual joysticks on your system that act just like physical USB controllers. The specific version, , is a signed driver release that bridged the gap between legacy Windows 7 systems and modern Windows 10/11 architectures. It remains backward compatible with older vJoy 2