Old Version: Keymagic

Old versions (v1.2–1.5) had a unique "layer" feature. You could hold Scroll Lock or Caps Lock to turn your J,K,L keys into a numpad. Modern gamers would call this a "function layer" – KeyMagic did it in 2010.

Brilliant for disabling the obnoxious Windows Key or Insert key before gaming. Old versions let you disable keys globally or per-app (though per-app was buggy pre-v2.0). The Bad (Why you shouldn't use it today) 1. The "Sticky Key" Bug (v1.x) If you remapped Ctrl to Caps Lock and typed too fast, KeyMagic would sometimes "lose" the key-up event. You'd end up typing LLLLLLIKE THIS until you tapped the stuck key again. This was infamous on old forums. keymagic old version

Old versions only passed ASCII scancodes. Try remapping Key A → Key Ä (German umlaut)? It would either crash or send nothing. Modern tools like PowerToys handle this perfectly. Old versions (v1

Zero. It hooked into the keyboard input stack at a low level. On a Pentium 4 machine, you wouldn't notice it existed. Brilliant for disabling the obnoxious Windows Key or

Archived on OldVersion.com or Internet Archive (search "KeyMagic 1.15"). Checksum the EXE – many "old version" downloads from 2012 are infected with keyloggers now.

CapsLock::Ctrl ; Old KeyMagic's most popular remap ScrollLock & j::Send Numpad1 ; Layer functionality LWin::Return ; Disable Windows key That gives you 90% of old KeyMagic's features with 100% modern compatibility.