Add virtual monitors to your Windows system with custom resolutions up to 8K, HDR10 support, and advanced features for VR, streaming, and headless setups.
Ensure you have the Microsoft Visual C++ Redistributable installed. If you see vcruntime140.dll not found, download it from Microsoft’s page.
2
Run the Virtual Driver Control app
Extract the downloaded files and launch VDC (Virtual Driver Control). Click the Install button to install the driver.The driver will be registered with Windows and a virtual display adapter will appear in Device Manager under “Display Adapters.”
3
Configure your virtual display
After installation, the virtual monitor will appear in Windows display settings. You can:
Set custom resolutions up to 8K
Configure refresh rates from 30Hz to 500Hz
Enable HDR mode (Windows 11 23H2+)
Adjust display positioning and scaling
View example configuration
The driver reads settings from C:\VirtualDisplayDriver\vdd_settings.xml. You can edit this file to customize:
Number of virtual monitors
Supported resolutions and refresh rates
HDR and color format settings
Hardware cursor configuration
GPU selection for multi-GPU systems
4
Start using your virtual display
Your virtual monitor is now ready! Use it with:
VR applications for additional overlay displays
OBS and streaming software for dedicated capture outputs