We often take it for granted. You pull a new mouse out of the box, plug it into a USB port (or connect via Bluetooth), and within three seconds, the cursor appears on screen. No CD-ROM. No "New Hardware Wizard." No reboot.
The only time you update is when you install (KB updates), which sometimes patches the HID class driver for security vulnerabilities (mouse firmware attacks are real). Final Verdict The HID mouse driver on Windows 11 is a masterpiece of backward compatibility. It is boring, reliable, and handles 99% of use cases perfectly. For the remaining 1% (competitive gaming, exotic vertical mice, or broken sleep states), a little Device Manager know-how goes a long way. hid mouse driver windows 11
The generic HID driver ignores your mouse’s onboard memory for polling rates. It defaults to 125Hz. We often take it for granted