About

Made to feel the airplane again.

FFB-Bridge started with one stick in a drawer. It's now a serious cockpit-feel engine for modern flight sims — built in the open, kept local-first, and free.

The developer

Built by a simmer, for simmers.

FFB-Bridge is written by Aditya Nag, a long-time flight simmer who missed how good force feedback used to feel — and still had a Microsoft SideWinder Force Feedback 2 in a drawer. So he built the bridge to make it fly again in MSFS and X-Plane, then kept going: more hardware, more aircraft feel, three operating systems, and a community library. It's shaped in public, with beta testers' reports driving the tuning, the fixes, and the feature list.

Local-first No app account, no telemetry. Simulator traffic stays on loopback; hardware stays on USB.
Free The whole app is free. Optional support is support — never a gate.
Built in public Community feedback has shaped tuning, profiles, docs, and crash fixes all the way to 1.0.
The company

Rohsam Inc.

FFB-Bridge is published by Rohsam Inc., Aditya's company, which owns the project and its trademarks. Corporate and publisher details are at rohsam.com.

Where it's made

Toronto, Canada

Designed and built in Toronto. The site follows Canadian and international privacy norms (CASL, PIPEDA, GDPR) — see the privacy policy.

Get in touch

Talk to us

Questions, bugs, or hardware reports are welcome through the feedback form, or email supportffb-bridge.com. There's a community forum too.

Fly with feel.

It's free, local, and built for the stick you already own.