## Closing Thoughts
| Question | Answer | |----------|--------| | | No. All tweaks are designed to be drop‑in ; they operate at runtime via stylesheets, QML imports, or scripting. Only header‑only C++ helpers require a recompile. | | Are the tweaks safe for production? | Most are safe, but always test in a staging environment first. The site marks each tweak with a stability label: Stable , Beta , or Experimental . | | Can I contribute my own tweak? | Absolutely! Fork the appropriate repo on GitHub, add your tweak following the contribution guide, and submit a pull request. The maintainers will review for style, licensing, and compatibility. | | What Qt versions are supported? | Qt 5.12+ and Qt 6.0+. Each tweak’s README lists the minimum required version. | | Is there a paid “Pro” tier? | No. All content is free and open source. A small “donate” button exists for supporters, but no premium features are locked behind a paywall. | | How do I report a broken tweak? | Use the “Report” button on the tweak’s page or open an issue on the GitHub repo. Include Qt version, OS, and steps to reproduce. | | Can I bundle multiple tweaks together? | Yes. The CLI provides a qtweaks pack command that merges selected QSS files and resolves conflicts, creating a single combined stylesheet. | | Do the tweaks work on mobile (Qt Quick‑Controls on Android/iOS)? | QML‑based tweaks work on all platforms supported by Qt Quick. Stylesheet tweaks target desktop widget‑based apps only. |
Multiple security vendors have blacklisted the domain because it often requires users to enter personal information or complete endless surveys to "unlock" a tweak. This data is frequently sold to third-party advertisers or used for spam campaigns. The Reality of "Tweaked" Apps