The million-dollar question: Does this count as a "cheat" in anti-cheat software (EAC, BattlEye, Vanguard)?
Generally, no. The driver modifies input polling, not game memory. However, the "Macro Engine" can be problematic. In strict competitive shooters (Valorant or CS2), using the macro feature to automate recoil control is a bannable offense. For fighting games or RPGs, it is generally safe. The exclusive driver itself is digitally signed (after disabling enforcement for install) and appears as a standard XInput device to anti-cheat systems. You will not be banned for using the driver, but use macros responsibly. zebion gamepad driver exclusive
The Zebion Gamepad Driver Exclusive is not your average plug-and-play installer. It is a custom-built kernel-level driver engineered specifically for the Zebion controller architecture. Unlike the default Microsoft drivers that treat your gamepad as a generic input device, this exclusive driver unlocks advanced features including: The million-dollar question: Does this count as a
This driver is "exclusive" because it leverages undocumented communication protocols unique to Zebion’s chipset (typically found in the Zebion Z300, Z-Elite, and Thunder Strike models). Generic drivers cannot access these features. This driver is "exclusive" because it leverages undocumented
We tested the Zebion Z-4 Pro controller on a standard Windows 11 rig using XInput testing tools.
| Metric | Generic Windows Driver | Zebion Gamepad Driver Exclusive | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Polling Rate | 125 Hz (fluctuating) | 1000 Hz (stable) | | Average Latency | 12.4 ms | 0.98 ms | | Stick Jitter (Center) | 12% | 3% | | Button Debounce | 15 ms | 1 ms | | Macro Support | No | Yes (Scriptable) |
The data is clear. The exclusive driver reduces input latency by over 90%. For a competitive gamer, this is the difference between a loss and a win.