Magic Mouse Windows Driver 🔥
as a generic Bluetooth HID device, meaning you lose the smooth inertial scrolling and multi-touch gestures that make it "magic."
Apple’s Magic Mouse is celebrated for its sleek, buttonless design and multi‑touch surface. But on Windows, out of the box, it’s a frustrating shadow of itself. You get basic left‑click, right‑click, and two‑finger scrolling – but no gestures, no swipe navigation, and often erratic pointer acceleration. The missing piece is a proper that can interpret Apple’s proprietary touch inputs.
If you love the Magic Mouse’s form factor and want to use it on Windows for , a good driver makes it viable. For gaming or precision design work , the low polling rate (90 Hz) and lack of a physical middle button are deal‑breakers. Many users ultimately switch to a Logitech MX Master or Microsoft Precision Mouse for native Windows support.
The official Apple driver provides basic scrolling, but it often lacks "smooth scrolling" or horizontal gestures. For a more "Mac-like" experience, many users turn to dedicated third-party utilities:
For Windows users on standard desktops/laptops, third‑party solutions offer a smoother path: