Why force feedback

Your stick has been lying to you.

A spring-centered stick pulls to the middle with the same force whether you're parked, cruising, or one knot from a stall. A real airplane never does that. Its controls load up, ease off, shudder, and settle — and that feel is half of how a pilot flies. Force feedback puts it back.

FFB-Bridge Dashboard showing live force output reacting to the flight FFB-Bridge Dashboard showing live force output reacting to the flight
Live force output, reading straight from the simulator's flight state.
What you've been missing

The airplane, talking back.

It loads up

Speed you can feel

The faster you go, the heavier the controls. Push into a high-speed dive and the stick fights back; slow to the flare and it goes light in your hand.

It warns you

The stall, in your wrist

A buffet builds through the stick as the wing approaches the stall, and a sharp shaker fires before the break — you feel trouble before you hear it.

It settles

Trim that holds

Trim the aircraft and the held force eases away; let go and the stick stays where you trimmed it — exactly like the real control feel pilots fly by.

It rumbles

Ground & engines

Feel the runway texture under the wheels, the thump of touchdown, the gear coming down, and the engines through the airframe.

Beloved hardware, revived

The good sticks never died.

Force-feedback joysticks were built for exactly this — and then modern sims stopped driving them. FFB-Bridge brings them back: it reads the simulator and drives the motors directly, no plugin and no in-sim install, so the stick that's been in a closet for years flies again in MSFS 2024, MSFS 2020, and X-Plane.

Pluginless Runs alongside the sim over the network — nothing installed inside MSFS or X-Plane.
Local & private No account, no telemetry. Simulator traffic stays on your machine; hardware stays on USB.
Free The whole app is free. Optional support is support, not a gate.

Feel the airplane again.

Free, local, and built for the stick you already own.