Compare DisplayFusion prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Binary Fortress Software. Published by Binary Fortress Software. Released on 3/29/2013. Available on PC. Genres: Utilities.

If Windows keeps failing your multi-monitor setup, DisplayFusion is the power-user toolkit that patches the gaps - though in 2025, you need to decide whether its depth still justifies the overhead.

I run a three-monitor desk and Windows has always had a complicated relationship with anything beyond two screens. That frustration is exactly the problem DisplayFusion has been solving since 2013, and after living with it across multiple Windows versions, the picture is more nuanced than the enthusiastic fan base suggests. The feature set is genuinely deep. Per-monitor taskbars let you configure each bar independently - showing only that screen's windows, custom pinned shortcuts, auto-hide, button grouping, and even separate clock displays. TitleBar Buttons add a small control strip to every app window so you can bounce a window to the next monitor with a single click. Monitor Fading automatically dims every screen except the one you're actively using, which is surprisingly useful for focus work. Beyond that, there are Window Position Profiles for saving and restoring exact layouts across a reboot, a Triggers system that fires scripted actions on events like window creation or desktop unlock, and Scripted Functions using C# macros for anyone who wants to automate complex multi-screen workflows. The Monitor Splitting feature, which carves a single physical display into multiple virtual monitors with their own taskbars and wallpapers, is particularly handy for ultrawide owners who want finer zone control than Windows natively offers. AMD Eyefinity and Nvidia Surround users also get bezel compensation support, which prevents windows from getting swallowed by monitor borders. For gamers specifically, there are practical wins: a "Prevent Window Deactivation" function stops fullscreen games from minimizing when you click on a second screen, and a mouse-lock option keeps the cursor anchored to the game window when titles fail to capture it correctly. These are small things that Windows still does not handle reliably out of the box, and DisplayFusion solving them quietly in the background is exactly the kind of utility value that builds loyalty. The honest tension in 2025 is that Windows, PowerToys FancyZones, and a growing roster of lightweight alternatives have closed the gap on the basics. Multi-monitor taskbars now exist natively in Windows 10 and 11, Snap Assist handles common window layouts, and FancyZones covers zone-based snapping with low overhead. DisplayFusion is feature-rich but carries noticeable startup weight, and its settings interface looks like it was designed during the Windows 7 era because, well, it was. Occasional stability complaints have surfaced from users on Windows 11, particularly around taskbar rendering after extended uptime and profile switching lag. It is not broken, but it is not frictionless either. The crowd that still gets clear, unambiguous value here is triple-monitor and ultrawide users, developers running complex window automation via Triggers and scripted macros, and anyone whose workflow demands precise layout profiles that survive reboots and monitor hot-plugging. If your setup is a standard dual-monitor desk and you mostly want a taskbar on each screen, Windows 11 plus PowerToys is probably enough. But if you have ever wanted to script exactly where every window lands the moment your machine boots, or split an ultrawide into logical zones with independent wallpapers and taskbars, DisplayFusion still earns its place. Alex, Scout Team

DisplayFusion
Utilities

DisplayFusion

Mar 29, 2013Binary Fortress Software
GamerScout Says

If Windows keeps failing your multi-monitor setup, DisplayFusion is the power-user toolkit that patches the gaps - though in 2025, you need to decide whether its depth still justifies the overhead.

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About DisplayFusion

I run a three-monitor desk and Windows has always had a complicated relationship with anything beyond two screens. That frustration is exactly the problem DisplayFusion has been solving since 2013, and after living with it across multiple Windows versions, the picture is more nuanced than the enthusiastic fan base suggests. The feature set is genuinely deep. Per-monitor taskbars let you configure each bar independently - showing only that screen's windows, custom pinned shortcuts, auto-hide, button grouping, and even separate clock displays. TitleBar Buttons add a small control strip to every app window so you can bounce a window to the next monitor with a single click. Monitor Fading automatically dims every screen except the one you're actively using, which is surprisingly useful for focus work. Beyond that, there are Window Position Profiles for saving and restoring exact layouts across a reboot, a Triggers system that fires scripted actions on events like window creation or desktop unlock, and Scripted Functions using C# macros for anyone who wants to automate complex multi-screen workflows. The Monitor Splitting feature, which carves a single physical display into multiple virtual monitors with their own taskbars and wallpapers, is particularly handy for ultrawide owners who want finer zone control than Windows natively offers. AMD Eyefinity and Nvidia Surround users also get bezel compensation support, which prevents windows from getting swallowed by monitor borders. For gamers specifically, there are practical wins: a "Prevent Window Deactivation" function stops fullscreen games from minimizing when you click on a second screen, and a mouse-lock option keeps the cursor anchored to the game window when titles fail to capture it correctly. These are small things that Windows still does not handle reliably out of the box, and DisplayFusion solving them quietly in the background is exactly the kind of utility value that builds loyalty. The honest tension in 2025 is that Windows, PowerToys FancyZones, and a growing roster of lightweight alternatives have closed the gap on the basics. Multi-monitor taskbars now exist natively in Windows 10 and 11, Snap Assist handles common window layouts, and FancyZones covers zone-based snapping with low overhead. DisplayFusion is feature-rich but carries noticeable startup weight, and its settings interface looks like it was designed during the Windows 7 era because, well, it was. Occasional stability complaints have surfaced from users on Windows 11, particularly around taskbar rendering after extended uptime and profile switching lag. It is not broken, but it is not frictionless either. The crowd that still gets clear, unambiguous value here is triple-monitor and ultrawide users, developers running complex window automation via Triggers and scripted macros, and anyone whose workflow demands precise layout profiles that survive reboots and monitor hot-plugging. If your setup is a standard dual-monitor desk and you mostly want a taskbar on each screen, Windows 11 plus PowerToys is probably enough. But if you have ever wanted to script exactly where every window lands the moment your machine boots, or split an ultrawide into logical zones with independent wallpapers and taskbars, DisplayFusion still earns its place. Alex, Scout Team

Tags

tier:aaaMulti-Monitor UtilityWindow ManagementHotkey AutomationScripted MacrosUltrawide SupportMonitor ProfilesBezel CompensationProductivity ToolEyefinity-Surround Compatible

Steam Deck & Linux

ProtonDB Borked

Doesn't currently run on Linux. Based on 3 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10, 11

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Game Info

Developer
Binary Fortress Software
Publisher
Binary Fortress Software
Release Date
Mar 29, 2013

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2026-06-109.02(lowest)

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How much does DisplayFusion cost?

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What platforms is DisplayFusion available on?

DisplayFusion is available on PC.

When was DisplayFusion released?

DisplayFusion was released on 29 March 2013.

Who developed DisplayFusion?

DisplayFusion was developed by Binary Fortress Software.