Vmix Trial Reset ›

Fails because the hardware ID remains the same. When vMix contacts the activation server, the server says, “This computer already claimed a 60‑day trial on [date]. No new trial.”

vMix is not a simple program that writes a single “install date” to the Windows Registry. StudioCoast has implemented multiple layers of anti‑tampering measures: vMix stores encrypted trial data in the Windows Registry under keys like: HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\StudioCoast\vMix\Trial Vmix Trial Reset

When you download vMix from the official website, you are given a of the full vMix Pro version. During these 60 days, you have access to every feature: 4K output, 8 external inputs, instant replay, GT Title Designer, and all streaming and recording options. No credit card is required. No watermarks appear on your output. Fails because the hardware ID remains the same

High risk, low reward. Not recommended. Method 4: Changing Hardware Components Claim: Change your motherboard or CPU, and vMix thinks it’s a new computer. No watermarks appear on your output

Fails because vMix uses the current online time via NTP (Network Time Protocol). Even if you disable internet, vMix writes the real installation time based on your BIOS clock, then compares it to a hidden timestamp. Windows also logs file creation dates that vMix can read.

vMix recreates the keys but finds the hardware ID unchanged. It may show 0 days remaining or a negative number. Some older versions (v21 and earlier) were vulnerable to this, but modern versions (v22+) are not.