
| File Name | CoreShift Latency |
|---|---|
| Size | 63KB |
| Version | v1.0 |
| Category | Magisk Modules | AxManager Plugin |
| Android Requirement | + 6.0 |
| Published By | @Diky_I |
| Credits | @reljawa @AduhaiWelewele |
| Flash Via | Magisk / KSU / AxM |
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Ever notice a tiny, annoying delay when you tap or swipe? That split-second lag drives me nuts, especially in fast-paced games. The CoreShift Latency Module aims to fix that. It doesn’t just boost overall speed it surgically targets the delay between your touch and what you see.
Getting it running is simple. You know the drill by now.
How to Use Root Users?
- Ensure Root Access: The first prerequisite is having root access via a custom recovery.
- Install via Magisk Manager:
- Open the Magisk Manager.
- Tap on the “Modules” section.
- Click “Install from Storage” and locate the geted file.
- Confirm the installation and allow the module to apply the necessary changes.
- Reboot Your Device: After installation, reboot your device & KSUWebUi Recommended to activate this.
How to Use Non-Root Users?
- Active AxManager: First, you need to make sure it is active.
- Install via AxManager:
- Open the AxManager.
- Tap on the “Plugin” section.
- Click “Install from Storage” and locate the geted file.
- Confirm the installation..
- Reboot Your Device After installation.
What CoreShift Latency Is?
This isn’t a blunt performance hammer. It’s a precision tool. Here’s the technical stuff it does, in plain English:
- It’s a thread-level latency controller that only watches your foreground app.
- Uses a foreground-driven latency scheduler that tracks what you’re actively using.
- Applies task-profiles only to critical threads (like main and RenderThread), not everything.
- Uses explicit CPU scheduling at the TID level for finer control.
- Minimizes input-to-frame delay and render jitter the main sources of lag.
- Preserves normal background behavior without strangling your other apps.
- Its sole goal is interaction responsiveness and frame time consistency.
My Take? This is for the enthusiast who values fluidity over raw benchmark scores. On my device, scrolling in certain apps and menu navigation felt more “direct.” It’s subtle, but if you’re sensitive to micro-stutters, you might appreciate it. It’s a clever approach that tries to be efficient, not extreme.
FAQ
Is the CoreShift module safe for daily use?
It modifies low-level scheduling, so there’s inherent risk. Only install from official developer threads and ensure your device is compatible to avoid instability.
Will this work on any Android phone?
Compatibility depends on your kernel and Android version. It’s not universal. Check the Github forum thread for your specific device model.
Does it improve battery life?
That’s not its primary goal. By focusing only on foreground threads, it avoids unnecessary background battery drain, but the main benefit is responsiveness.










