Requirements:
Installation Steps:
João released v1.0 on XDA on a Sunday morning. By Tuesday, it had 12,000 downloads. By Friday, it was featured on Mishaal Rahman’s Android Weekly.
But not everyone was happy.
“This is placebo,” wrote user kernelfreak_2020. “You can’t improve touch without custom EAS governor tuning.”
João responded with a video. On the left: stock POCO F3. On the right: same phone, same game, with the module. He ran a high-speed camera at 960fps. The difference was clear: the module’s phone registered taps 2.5 frames earlier at 60fps.
Then came the controversy. A known kernel developer accused João of “overclocking the touch controller,” which could damage the digitizer. João released his full source code and a detailed explanation: No voltage changes. No hardware overclock. Only software pipeline optimization. touch improvement magisk module
The XDA moderators stepped in. After reviewing the code, they declared the module safe for all devices.
Start with TouchImprove by kdrag0n (if available for your device). It’s open-source and has a sane default.
Pro tip: Combine with a 120Hz+ screen and Performance governor for buttery experience—but expect slightly higher battery drain (~5–8%/day extra). Requirements:
Nothing in engineering is free. Here is the honest cost of perfect touch responsiveness.
Even outside of gaming, the UI feels snappier. List scrolling becomes fluid, and keyboard typing accuracy often improves due to better registration of rapid taps.