Windows Keyboard Shortcut To Rotate Screen (Simple)

WebCam Mania is a series of webcam based games I've developed in my free time. The original inspiration for these games came from PlayStation EyeToy games. I am interested in human-computer interaction and I wanted to study what can be achieved with this kind of approach.

The first version of WebCam Mania was made in 2005. It was based on VMM Basic that was developed by Balrog Software on top of PureBasic. The second version - WebCam Mania GamePack 2 - was built around 2009 for Adobe Flash Player 10. WebCam Mania 3 was released in 2014 for Flash Player 11. The latest version, WebCam Mania 4 was released in 2020 and should run directly in any modern browser. windows keyboard shortcut to rotate screen

- Mika Tanninen, WebCam Mania Developer

Windows Keyboard Shortcut To Rotate Screen (Simple)

This is the last Flash version of the WebCam Mania game series. If you still have Flash enabled browser, you can start the game by clicking the image below.

Furthermore, Intel has removed support for these hotkeys in newer versions of the Intel Graphics Command Center (starting with 6th Generation Intel products). For modern systems, you may need to manually enable them:

If someone tells you “Windows has a built-in rotate shortcut,” they’ve likely only ever used Intel graphics. Now you know the truth.

If you have a dedicated NVIDIA graphics card, the generic shortcut may not apply. Instead:

Because Intel integrated graphics are extremely common (especially in laptops and office PCs), the Ctrl + Alt + Arrow shortcut feels “standard.” Many guides online incorrectly state it as a Windows feature.

Windows Keyboard Shortcut To Rotate Screen (Simple)

Furthermore, Intel has removed support for these hotkeys in newer versions of the Intel Graphics Command Center (starting with 6th Generation Intel products). For modern systems, you may need to manually enable them:

If someone tells you “Windows has a built-in rotate shortcut,” they’ve likely only ever used Intel graphics. Now you know the truth.

If you have a dedicated NVIDIA graphics card, the generic shortcut may not apply. Instead:

Because Intel integrated graphics are extremely common (especially in laptops and office PCs), the Ctrl + Alt + Arrow shortcut feels “standard.” Many guides online incorrectly state it as a Windows feature.