Pimvdb and Spazzarama for little snippets of code Enjoy! Click Stop to close/hide the crosshair. Alternatively, you can click on Window List and choose a specific window. Choose a process to target (only processes with windows will appear), you can also type in the name of a process (it must be on the list). Click on Settings and choose a crosshair design, change the colour if you want No (although I haven't tried), that'd require hooking DirectX which could result in a ban. The only thing it does is display a crosshair on a window. If you like what you see, remember to leave a like and favorite ReShade 4.x is now supported The settings menu is now bound to Home by default (previously Shift-F2 ). This allows Crosshair X to run completely independently of any game and process, making it secure and anti-cheat compliant. Crosshair Overlay Subscribe Description RESHADE-XHAIR A fully customizable, in-game, fullscreen-compatible crosshair overlay. Fans of most first-person-shooter titles like Battlefield will know what a crosshair is typically a small circle or x-shaped overlay representing where your shots will land.
You can now adjust the X and Y offset of the crosshair (although you really don't need this)Ībsolutely not, this does not hook, write or read any memory from another process. Crosshair X and EAC: The fullscreen overlay is achieved by using the Xbox Game Bar on Windows 10 which is a trusted overlay platform built by Microsoft. You can now select a specific colour using the colour selector. New crosshair designs: Dot and Large Dot. This means you can easily target a specific window. * The window list contains ALL windows in your taskbar, not just the main window's of the processes. * Choosing a process will only target the process' main window. There's now a process list and window list. No flicker whatsoever because of a new drawing method (no longer uses SetPixel) There is a crosshair preview now to see what each crosshair looks like. The crosshair should always in the correct place no matter what computer you use. Rewritten from scratch and more neater (from coding perspective) It will display a crosshair over the chosen process or window until you stop it. I got bored so I decided to rewrite my External Crosshair tool from scratch in C#.