Built for the pilots who actually use it.
FFB-Bridge is built for serious sim pilots, many of whom have been flying for decades. Visual contrast mode makes the app easier to read on older eyes, dim displays, and mixed cockpit lighting — without changing your force-feedback tuning.
One setting, whole-app.
Settings → General → Visual contrast. The interface keeps the compact, technical layout a cockpit utility needs, but everything gets easier to scan. It applies immediately and works with Light, Dark, and System themes.
Real eyes, real cockpits
Aging eyes, cataracts and post-cataract vision, color-vision differences, dim rooms, glare, laptop panels and older displays — and anyone who just wants clearer separation when scanning quickly.
More than hue
It helps red/green and other color-vision differences, but it's deliberately broader: it's about readability for everyone, which is why it strengthens text, borders, and focus — not just colors.
Visual only
Visual contrast changes the app's palette and nothing else. Force output, profiles, effects, aircraft behavior, and device selection are all unchanged.
Visual contrast, answered.
Does Visual contrast change the force feedback?
No. It only changes the app's visual palette. Profiles, tuning, effects, and device output stay the same.
Is this only for color-blind users?
No. It helps color-vision differences, but it's also for cataracts, aging eyes, dim rooms, glare, older displays, and anyone who wants clearer UI separation.
Does it work in light and dark mode?
Yes. Visual contrast works with the app's Light, Dark, and System theme settings.
Does the Dashboard still use colors?
Yes — but color isn't the only cue. Effect groups also use labels, fixed ordering, larger swatches, and chip text.
Easier to read. Same forces.
It's in every build, free, on Windows, Linux, and macOS.



