Lunar proved AI aim works. A generic person-detector with mouse output is where it stops — especially in Fortnite on controller.
Undetected by design · Instant delivery · Trained for Fortnite (stylized characters)
Lunar deserves credit: it showed thousands of people that computer-vision aim is real, free, and runs on a normal gaming PC. If you’re here, you’ve probably tried it — and run into where a general-purpose project stops fitting Fortnite.
The first wall is output. Lunar-style tools move the mouse, and the moment Fortnite sees mouse input it treats you as a KBM player — your controller aim assist is gone. For a controller player that trade is backwards: you gain a detector and lose the strongest legitimate aim help in the game.
The second wall is the model. Generic person-detection is trained on photos of real humans; Fortnite renders stylised characters in skins that look nothing like them. A model trained on Fortnite itself — varied skins, ranges and lighting, retrained every release — simply sees more enemies, sooner.
NeyraX writes to a virtual controller stick. Fortnite keeps you in controller mode, native aim assist stays active, and the AI’s corrections layer on top of it — the two work together instead of the AI replacing the game’s own help.
Stick movement is also what your gameplay is supposed to look like. Mouse-teleport corrections in a controller player’s replay are exactly the kind of inconsistency that gets clips flagged by other players.
The NeyraX detector is trained specifically on Fortnite gameplay and retrained on fresh sessions every update, with evaluation on held-out gameplay rather than a single good-looking clip. Your app picks up each new model automatically.
No Python environment, no dependency errors, no editing config files: a one-click installer, a strength slider, and ticket-based support in Discord. Free tools are a great way to learn what AI aim is — a finished product is what you run every day.
Detects enemies locally in real time, with cadence determined by your GPU and selected performance profile.
Velocity-gated control suppresses detector jitter while preserving fast target changes.
External only — no injection, no memory reads. The game sees controller input, nothing else.
Flick to a target and the engine finishes the last pixels. Overshoot-free.
Corrections blend into your own stick input. It amplifies your intent, not replaces it.
Sets up the AI engine, drivers, HidHide and your controller automatically. No terminals.
Launch week: 25% off with code NEYRAX25
You’re paying for the Fortnite-trained model, stick output that keeps your aim assist, a one-click installer and actual support. If those don’t matter to you, free tools are genuinely fine to learn with.
NeyraX is controller-native by design — that’s where its stick output and aim-assist synergy shine. Many mouse players run it via a controller layout for exactly that reason.
Fortnite switches input mode based on the last device it sees. Mouse movement flips you to KBM mode, where controller aim assist doesn’t apply. Stick output keeps you on the controller side.
NeyraX is external — screen in, virtual stick out, nothing injected into the game. No tool is zero-risk, but it avoids the mechanisms anti-cheat primarily targets.