Xtreme Music Magisk [PRO 2025]

Trading Forex requires practice, but this takes a lot of time.
Soft4FX Forex Simulator lets you train fast and efficiently.
  • Faster than demo trading
  • No risk involved
  • Free demo
Soft4FX Forex Simulator

Designed for:

MT4
MT5

Forex Simulator works as a plugin to Metatrader. It combines great charting capabilities of MT4 and MT5 with quality tick data and economic calendar to create a powerful trading simulator.

Use charts, templates and drawing tools available in Metatrader.

How Forex Simulator works

Improve your trading skills in a fast and efficient way
Go back in time

Forex Simulator lets you move back in time and replay the market starting from any selected day.

Replay the market

You can watch charts, indicators and economic news as if it was happening live...

...but you can also:

  • Pause and resume
  • Make it faster or slower
  • Step candle-by-candle
  • Rewind candle-by-candle
Trade
  • Open and close trades
  • Place pending orders
  • Modify orders
  • Use SL and TP
  • Use trailing stops
  • Close trades partially

Everything works just like in real life, but there is no risk at all!

Watch the results

Watch your profit/loss, equity, drawdown and lots of other numbers and statistics in real time.

You can also export trading results to Excel or create a HTML report.

You can analyze your trading results to find weak points of your strategy.

Why you should use it

Trading historical data saves a lot of time compared to demo trading and other forms of paper trading.

It also allows you to adjust the speed of simulation, so you can skip less important periods of time and focus on more important ones.

Xtreme Music Magisk [PRO 2025]

Xtreme Music relies on code originally written for Android 5–8. As Android’s audio stack has evolved (Project Mainline, AAudio, SELinux enforcements), keeping this module working requires hacky workarounds like sepolicy-inject and disabling permission monitors. On Android 13+, it often breaks after monthly security updates.

Xtreme Music cannot magically improve bitrate-limited codecs like SBC or AAC. If your headphones use SBC at 328kbps, all the DSP in the world won’t restore lost transients. For LDAC or aptX HD users, the module actually re-encodes processed PCM back into the codec, adding latency and potential generational loss. xtreme music magisk

The module applies three or more independent effects (V4A → Dolby → Sony) in series. While each sounds fine alone, stacking them introduces phase cancellation, digital clipping, and an unnatural “processed” quality. The default presets often boost 60Hz bass by +12dB while scooping mids—a recipe for listener fatigue, not fidelity. Xtreme Music relies on code originally written for

It can make cheap headphones sound different—and occasionally better—but “different” is not the same as “accurate.” For most users, a well-tuned stock equalizer or a single instance of Wavelet (non-root) will provide 90% of the benefit with 0% of the headache. Xtreme Music remains a fascinating, bloated, and slightly unreliable monument to Android’s DIY spirit—use it if you enjoy the journey, not just the destination. The module applies three or more independent effects

High-quality historical data

Forex Simulator lets you download and use 15+ years of tick-by-tick data from Dukascopy, TrueFX and HistData including real variable spreads.
This includes 60 Forex pairs, gold, silver, bitcoin, etherum and 12 stock indexes.
Dukascopy
TrueFX
HistData

Xtreme Music relies on code originally written for Android 5–8. As Android’s audio stack has evolved (Project Mainline, AAudio, SELinux enforcements), keeping this module working requires hacky workarounds like sepolicy-inject and disabling permission monitors. On Android 13+, it often breaks after monthly security updates.

Xtreme Music cannot magically improve bitrate-limited codecs like SBC or AAC. If your headphones use SBC at 328kbps, all the DSP in the world won’t restore lost transients. For LDAC or aptX HD users, the module actually re-encodes processed PCM back into the codec, adding latency and potential generational loss.

The module applies three or more independent effects (V4A → Dolby → Sony) in series. While each sounds fine alone, stacking them introduces phase cancellation, digital clipping, and an unnatural “processed” quality. The default presets often boost 60Hz bass by +12dB while scooping mids—a recipe for listener fatigue, not fidelity.

It can make cheap headphones sound different—and occasionally better—but “different” is not the same as “accurate.” For most users, a well-tuned stock equalizer or a single instance of Wavelet (non-root) will provide 90% of the benefit with 0% of the headache. Xtreme Music remains a fascinating, bloated, and slightly unreliable monument to Android’s DIY spirit—use it if you enjoy the journey, not just the destination.

25K+ Users

Over 25,000 copies of Forex Simulator sold worldwide, and counting