FPS Display
On-screen framerate readout with rolling average and 1% low — know exactly when a chunk load tanks you.
Ten modules in the mod, plus a Lunar-style Electron launcher with Quick Play, a command palette, a Modrinth + CurseForge browser, and per-version mod profiles.
All ten are bundled in the Swift Client mod that the launcher injects at startup. Open the mod menu in-game with RIGHT SHIFT to toggle, configure, or rebind anything.
On-screen framerate readout with rolling average and 1% low — know exactly when a chunk load tanks you.
Left and right clicks per second, with a tunable averaging window. Pair with Keystrokes for streamer overlays.
On-screen WASD + mouse display with per-key colors and customizable shape. Resize and reposition in the HUD editor.
XYZ readout with facing direction (N/E/S/W) and current biome. Auto-hides in menus.
Live durability bars for helmet, chestplate, leggings, boots, and main-hand item. Color-warned when low.
Stacked icons with bold timer text. Sort by remaining duration, hide hidden effects, theme by amplifier.
Press once to sprint, press once to stop — same for sneak. Rebind the toggle keys per module.
Smooth optical zoom with sensitivity scaling. Hold the bind to engage, scroll to fine-tune.
Gamma boost so caves and nighttime are readable. Toggles cleanly without restarting the world.
Custom shape, color, outline, gap, and thickness. Optional dynamic mode that responds to attack cooldown.
Swift Client ships an Electron + React launcher that owns version management, Microsoft auth, Java, the Fabric loader, and mod browsing — so you never touch a config file.
One pill. Pick a Minecraft version, hit play, and the launcher downloads assets, libraries, the Fabric loader, and the Swift Client mod. A progress ring tracks every phase.
Every Minecraft version has its own mods, resource packs, and shaders. Browse Modrinth or CurseForge inside the launcher; drag-drop local .jar files.
Linear / Raycast-style fuzzy switcher: jump screens, change Minecraft version, replay recents, toggle the console, open the logs folder. ? shows every shortcut.
If Minecraft exits unexpectedly, a crash overlay pops with one-click buttons to open the crash report and latest.log — no folder spelunking.