Or should it be "Windows 10 vs. the world?!?" build 2004 edition?
Back in April 2014, we published a little blog about this cheap Chinese receiver and how we managed to get it back online. Now, back then we were completely aware there were videos on YouTube, Forums, and other sources so such an article was nothing new even back then. As end-user, we found ourselves downloading from garbage share sites that only lead to either misleading links or infected files. It was at this time we used our blogging capabilities and power to make an official tutorial along with all software sources in one place. 190k downloads later, Yeah, we call it a success.
Fast forward to May of 2020, suddenly we were getting rained upon by users who were a part of the Microsoft partner program saying that the build 2004 version of Windows 10 disables their China Receiver. Common sense would be to direct those energies towards Microsoft and maybe they would fix the issue.
It appears that's simply not the case. Read on if you wish to listen to my diatribe of corporate hate.
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And so the 2004 build update trashes my China Xbox Receiver drivers!
I originally thought the worst. That Microsoft was basically doing everything it could to kick the Xbox 360 product line. A line that is not old enough to get a learner permit and drive in certain parts of the United States at 15 years of age. Brutally put it into the dirt with the hardest planned obsolescence program that was only seen by Microsoft during the Original Xbox. However, if you start googling "Windows 10 build 2004 unknown device" you suddenly find yourself in the company of other users than just a cheap-ass Chinese knock-off product. Users with wi-fi adapters, and video cards are all getting the same issue.
At this point of realization, it may not be Malice that Microsoft was going for but straight-up incompetence. That instead of including the entire driver tree into their kernel they simply 'skipped' a few libraries. Especially if you have to choose which driver to use! Or perhaps it's not incompetence. That Microsoft views older hardware as a security threat and must be eliminated. To wipe the playing field as it were of hardware so they don't have to constantly see a report from it similar to how Microsoft made a fake ADB driver for the Ouya console.
Combine this with Microsoft discontinuing support for Windows 7 and it does feel like they're corralling all of their end-users into a miserable situation. Where else would you go for the latest gaming experience? Linux? Mac? I suppose if everyone had a backbone and left for one of those operating systems then yes. The gaming community just doesn't have that kind of fortitude.
The problem.
As of June 02, 2020, most of my PCs have not gone to build since 2004, most are still sitting at 1908. However, the problem is a lot of people are making the jump by joining the Microsoft partner program and getting the latest build of Windows 10 thinking it will be bigger and better than before. Because of 5, 10, and 40 responses all of the screaming that my tutorial does not work. I went to work by making a garbage account on Microsoft and giving them all of the information of a computer that has nothing in order to get build 2004 installed.
The problem.
It came as a shock to a lot of people who owned the Chinese adapter that their device is now rendered as an unknown device. That even though the Hardware ID still shows present. Their driver is completely blown away.
A lot of users simply went through my tutorial again on the Xbox 360 adapter driver installation. By choosing which driver to use for this unknown device.
Windows even gives you the rare fleeting hope that it was installed successfully just like Build 1908.
Then at the very end windows, 10 build 2004 kicks you in the face and not only does not install the driver. but renders the entire device useless by loading nothing. which we suppose is ONE way to get Windows to stop complaining about device issues! Simply render the device useless!
This is bullshit. Because Windows gives the user an option to go out and find the driver yourself. It in fact does not complain if it's a different driver so long as it has its EV cert digital certificate valid. If device selection is now useless is Windows 2004 what the hell is the point Microsoft? This is a flat-out bad OS design.
The fix.
The problem is actually Microsoft's own security. To get our controller back online we need to get rid of that security Microsoft has put in place between us the end-user and the OS. Now, we're no Microsoft experts but it's generally a bad idea to remove security features from your OS. But if it cripples the way you enjoy your computer then what's the point of even having said computer or hardware? The Xbox 360 may be an old joystick but it's still a very capable joystick where if someone whips one into a wall we would be more angry about the plaster hole in the wall than losing a few bucks on a controller.
The first thing we are going to do is go into the Windows power shell. Or you can type CMD to get to the command prompt so long as in both cases you are in this command prompt as an administrator. Otherwise, these commands will not work.
type in the following.
bcdedit /set nointegritychecks on
it will respond with:
The operation was completed successfully
bcdedit /set testsigning on
Note: If the test signing command responds with:
an error occured setting element data The value protected Secure Boot policy cannot by modified or deleted.
Then that means you may have to go into the BIOS of your motherboard and disable such as feature in order for you to proceed any further in disabling test signing so that we can re-install the controller.
The screen above is the ASRock BIOS that is on the test-station motherboard we have. Your BIOS screen may look very different but newer BIOS screens with UEFI functionality will have a "Security" tab and probably underneath that will be the "Secure Boot" flag that you will need to disable. After reboot a warning screen may come up asking the user to input a code to confirm disabling Secure Boot.
If the safe boot is disabled then this command too shall respond with:
The operation completed successfully.
Finally, the last thing you wish to type into the shell is the following:
shutdown /r /o
Reboot into the Windows recovery screen.
To undo the fix.
Simply type in the following:
bcdedit /set nointegritychecks off bcdedit /set testsigning off
and reboot your windows so that integrity checking and test signing are restored.
Just a note: There is a good possibility that by re-enabling the test signing and integrity checking that your OS will detect the unsigned driver and kick it right back out of your system.
Disable that watermark:
What we've done in the past with XBCD for getting old-school XBOX controllers working also applies here. I'll often just leave my OS in test signing mode. Because fuck it I know what kind of drivers we're loading on our OS. To get rid of that pesky splash screen at the bottom you can simply run the uwd.exe file that we just included into the chinaxbox.7z file as of 06/11/2020. That should remove the splash screen and keep test signing disabled indefinitely.
Now I'm sure I will get some Microsoft fanboy saying that we shouldn't be keeping our OS'es in test signing mode to which I would have to respond with:
What choice to you leave us? You've locked the user out from selecting their own software! -S
Windows recovery.
As this isn't our first blog article talking about removing security in order to get legacy hardware going we'll take the documentation for the XBCD and just place it here.
If you held down the shift key and pressed that restart button correctly you will be presented with a menu of something like what is above. Select Troubleshoot. Select Advanced options. Select Start-Up Settings. Finally Select the "Restart" button and the computer will go into boot selection mode. You will not have a mouse in this mode. simply pressing the 7 key will be enough for the OS to reboot once more allowing you to finally be in the mode that we want to install the driver. It should also be noted that manually disabling driver signature enforcement is only good for one reboot versus the script or command-line method which is a more permanent approach towards disabling signature enforcement. If you only choose the manual method of disabling integrity checking then the next time you need to install a driver you will have to go through the manual process again.
Reboot the OS.
Now would be a good time to go grab some software.
Direct download:
This site prides itself on being the one-stop blog for everything you could need in a guide. However, as our usual disclaimer, you should always run a virus checker over any executable you get from a third party site including my own. Do not trust anything unless it comes from the source manufacturer. We will keep things clean as long as the site owner is alive but you may never know! Also, note that to preserve file space and for simplicity's sake, all versions have been compressed into a single solid 7-Zip file. You may use WinRAR or 7-Zip to extract the files in this archive: This archive which is approximately 8Mb in size contains both the 32-bit and 64-bit versions of the Xbox 360 receiver driver. Click here to download the archive or click on the icon to the right of this paragraph to begin. Links will continue to be provided here in the event the company discontinues support.
Extract files:
The first thing you will want to do is get a copy of WinRAR or 7-Zip. Any package that is capable of extracting 7-zip files. In this tutorial, we shall extract it to C:\chinaxbox\. You can extract it anywhere you like just keep a note as to where you extracted these files while reading this tutorial.
Notes about the archive:
In the following example above we will be extracting everything in the C:\chinaxbox\ folder. This archive contains the following files:
- Xbox360_32Eng - This is the 32-bit version of the Xbox Driver for those working with Windows 7 32-bit, Windows 8 32-bit, and finally Windows 10 32-bit.
- Xbox360_64Eng - This is the 64-bit version of the Xbox Driver for those working with Windows 7 64-bit, Windows 8 64-bit, and finally Windows 10 64-bit.
- Xbox360_Mod_XP - This version is made specifically for Windows XP 32/64 bit and Windows 7 32/64. Windows XP Tutorial is listed here.
- uwd.exe - this executable is copied over from the XBCD article. It's responsible for disabling the watermarks so you can keep your Windows box in test signing mode without showing it.
Let's begin.
The directory we're going to focus on in this for the Windows 10 build 2004 problem is the Xbox360_Mod_XP because Windows XP cannot have drivers forced onto the operating system. The drivers needed the .inf file changed to the exact device number in order for the driver to install. Well, that's exactly what is happening in Windows 10 build 2004! When we try to specify a driver it fails. but if the inf already has the device ID (like the original Microsoft gaming receiver dongle) it succeeds. Unfortunately, since we have changed the information in that INF file. The certification is lost which is why we had to disable test signing.
Let's dive back into the device manager. Right-click on our unknown device which is our China Xbox receiver and click on update driver. Then, click the box for "Browse my computer for drivers."
Although we're in the right folder you may not. so click on "let me pick from a list of available drivers on my computer."
Show all devices are fine. Click the Next button to proceed.
We really don't care what it loads because we're going to click on Have Disk...
Now, we're NOT going to go into the regular Xbox folder. we're going to go into the Xbox360_Mod_XP folder, then into Windows 7, and finally press the Open button.
If you extracted the 7-zip folder onto your C: drive the path should look something like this. Diving into the XP-Mod folder with the altered INF file. Click OK to proceed.
Since the INF file is locked onto the driver, there is no selection here unlike the original Xbox 360 China receiver tutorial. so click next to continue.
If you get a Windows security warning like this one. Then this is actually a very good sign. It means that since signature enforcement is disabled and test signing is on this window is the final precaution to keep you the end-user from installing a driver that could cripple your OS. Since we know what we're doing... Kinda... Click Install this driver software anyway.
If everything goes according to plan you should have a non-digitally signed Xbox receiver driver installed into Windows 10 build 2004 and can now resume your gaming experience.
If you get an error "The has for the file is not present in the specified catalog file. The files are likely to corrupt or victim of tampering"
That's true! WE tampered with the INF file to make sure the vendor and product ID point to the Chinese receiver! But this error is due to test signing not being turned on and further diagnostics must be done to your Windows 10 build 2004 SO to determine why you cannot enable test signing and disable integrity checking. This could be due to your PC being stuck in a Secure Boot policy. Or an advanced firewall and/or sandbox software preventing direct access to the OS in this manner.
Final thoughts.
As time marches onward. Microsoft tries to replace webpage after webpage with Xbox One promotion items to entice legacy owners to give up and buy a controller. That your 15-year-old controller that you've used to beat countless games is somehow useless in 2020 and that you MUST buy something new or get destroyed in a random Windows update. While we find this attitude to be annoying as hell. It's still not going to let us give up on the 10+ Xbox controllers that we have in a case within our house.
They are still valid to play upon and they make excellent party controllers. Given the cost of an Xbox 360 controller where you can find them at a thrift store for a few bucks. You don't even feel bad if it gets dropped or crushed unlike the 60+ dollar controllers above. Because of the 2.4 GHz system, the latency for us was almost non-existent which helped during our days playing with Android set-top boxes which it still does with the Nvidia Shield.
Microsoft like many of the megacorps loves to spout out this idealistic image that they are a green energy company while in the same breath throwing generations of plastic right into the landfill. plastic which if given to the right gamers will still enjoy despite the fact that these things are going on 15+ years old.
Anyhow, we hope that you found this updated article about Windows 10 builds 2004 useful.
11/03/2020 - P.S. If you leave a comment about Forza Horizon or Forza Motorsport. You're talking to the wrong person. Instead, you need to jump on their forums and tell them to support general DirectX inputs instead of being a bunch of elitist fucks that validate official Microsoft hardware as the only means of input support for their game. They should fix their game as they're the ones making millions off of it. Not us. Any future comments about Forza will get straight-up deleted. We don't even own the game and given how pushy users of that community are we don't even WANT the game! We're done.
Until next time.
May server protect you.
+++END OF LINE.
I have tried everything on this site and i still can not get my controllers to connect to the dongle at all, they just keep "searching" for eachother and never connects. Anyone with any advice here?
Going to assume you've pressed the sync button on both so the receiver starts flashing faster and your controller starts pinwheeling clockwise.
How new is this receiver? Someone did send to me a receiver that legit had a garbage antenna going for it. It could be a similar case and then i'd file a claim to get your money back.
- S
I press sync on both of them, receiver blinks and controller spins and its like they cant find eachother. I bought it 2 weeks ago.
If device manager is clean and it's still not syncing. then you could be dealing with a bad antenna off of the micro controller There has been a rash of bad antenna xbox 360 receivers out there. Hopefully you can return this device to your reseller.
Any luck? I am dealing with the same issue.
Hello
I need some help, I did the whole procedure But when selecting the drive it informs that it is not compatible with the 64x version I tested it with all the files and it gives the same error
I can't see my previous comment yet, so I can't reply to or edit it. But I wanted to make a correction.
The receiver gives the device descriptor error ever since I upgraded to a 2022-gen motherboard (model H610MH). This happens on *both* Windows 10 *and* Windows 7! But the same receiver works perfectly fine on my older desktop, and my laptop.
So this time, it's not a windows problem, it's a hardware problem. The hardware manufacturer dickwads have chosen to throw reverse compatibility out the window since 2021-2022. Heck, I even had trouble getting my keyboard & mouse working on Windows 7 because the mobo only has W10 drivers. I had to find some modified XHCI drivers (backported from W8) to get the USB ports working on W7. Same problem with Ethernet.
I'm guessing, this new USB protocol is messing with the xbox 360 receiver, at least with the chinese version.
A did have a problem like this with a Lenovo laptop where if you dug enough into their forums they talk about how there is a known defect in how the USB 3.0 ports were mounted inside of the laptop. If you pushed on certain USB sticks while plugged into the Lenovo laptop they would finally activate. Otherwise, it either sits there doing nothing, OR it would give the error you described.. Sometimes when SUPER lucky on the Lenovo it finally acknowledged it after a lot of wiggling of the interface.
But it sounds like you did figure out the issue. Now, what to do about it?
If making the motherboard is out of the question. There are a lot of rather affordable PCI-1x HUB adapters out there. If you got a local computer store they may have some 2-porters for like $10 because dell was a bunch of cheap-asses on some of their Optiplex and installed a card instead of just adding the ports for the motherboard.
Anyhow. thanks for the follow-up. hope you can get it restored and working.
I have thought about that, I think I may even have an old PCI-1x USB card or two in the closet somewhere. I'll see if I can get the receiver working with that route, and let you know what I find out. Thanks!
Just as a followup - I bought a PCI USB card, only to find out I accidentally bought a PCI-8x version, while my board only has room for a PCI-1x. Eventually I gave up and bought a used original microsoft brand xbox 360 receiver for $20. (Those things are hard to find now!) Plugged it in, and it works like a charm.
So to anyone wondering, the new 2022+ gen motherboards *do* still support the original receivers, at least for now.
Usando um HUB USB qualquer o problema é resolvido. Não acredito que era tão simples.
Hello there,
Thank you for these articles. Unfortunately I have already been down these paths, and while they did work in the past, recently I have started encountering the "Device Descriptor Request Failed" problem that you mention.
But I don't think this is related to a broken fuse, because the exact same receiver works perfectly fine on Windows 7!
I dug around extensively but couldn't find a solution anywhere. Any advice or insight about that particular problem would be greatly appreciated!
I cannot make download of the driveres. Theres someting wrong ;-;
Apologies, my download plugin freaked out for a second. I just cycled out everything and tested it on multiple browsers and it should be working good now.
Thank you for letting me know!
Be warned, most of these so called hackers are imposters, Iíve been ripped off 4 times already, thankfully my friend gave me a reliable contact, he works with discretion and delivers, he does all sorts of hacks, I would prefer to let his services speak for itself, you can contact him email.... w******r on W**** or (might have to download w*) , if he asks where you got his contact you can say from Lisa.
Ripped off 4 times so now you're suggesting the others get ripped off. Nice! Redacted your contacts. Nice try.
- S
my Chinese xbox 360 receiver does not get detected by windows 10 at all but the device still shows the green light and flashes when I push the sync button. It doesn't event show up as unknown device in windows 10. Is it faulty or blocked by registry?
Well, that's different.. usually you get an unknown device it the usb hub sends a pulse for identifier and it receives nothing back. by stating that you get nothing in device manager that tells me that the data line isn't even being sensed by the USB hub. Corporate machines can behave similarly if the plug-n-play service was disabled via group policy.
Just to eliminate all of that, try plugging the receiver into another device to just for verification purposes that it's indeed the adapter and not something OS/Firewall related.