
Mouse X
If the default Windows arrow bothers you more than you admit, Mouse X lets you swap it out for something personal and share your own cursor skins through Steam Workshop.
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About Mouse X
I spend more hours staring at my desktop cursor than at most game menus, and that quiet little arrow has always felt like unclaimed territory. Mouse X by CenterPoint Gaming is a lightweight PC utility that lets you apply custom live cursors system-wide and participate in a Steam Workshop community of user-made cursor skins. It sits in a growing category of cursor-personalisation tools on Steam, alongside the likes of YoloMouse and Cursor Engine, and while the field is competitive, the Workshop integration here is the real draw for anyone who wants to both consume and create. The core loop is simple enough to explain in a sentence: pick a cursor skin, apply it to your desktop, done. Where Mouse X earns a longer look is in the Workshop side of things. The ability to upload and share your own custom cursor skins means the tool has a creative ceiling that extends as far as the community does. If you have even modest pixel-art skills or enjoy skinning software, there is something quietly satisfying about seeing a hand-crafted cursor skin living on someone else's desktop. For the purely passive user, it functions as a library browser, and the quality of that library will depend entirely on how much traction the Workshop gains over time. The honest caveat worth naming: Mouse X has no Steam reviews and no Metacritic score at the time of writing, which means CenterPoint Gaming is releasing into genuinely uncharted reception territory. The tool's feature set, as described, is narrow. There is no mention of per-application cursor profiles, animated VFX layers, or anti-cheat compatibility disclosures that more established tools in this space tend to address upfront. Buyers who need those features should look elsewhere until the developer clarifies the scope. What Mouse X does promise is the basics done cleanly, with Workshop hooks baked in from the start, which for a young utility is the right foundation. Who is this for, practically speaking? Streamers who want a recognisable on-screen pointer. Pixel-art hobbyists who want their cursor to be part of their desktop aesthetic. Anyone who finds the Windows default arrow genuinely offensive. It is not a power-user toolkit and it should not be evaluated as one. Measured against what it sets out to do, a no-fuss cursor personalisation tool with community sharing built in, the concept is solid. Whether the execution holds up will become clear once the community and the developer's update cadence have had time to speak for themselves. Kai, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 10
Recommended
- OS
- Windows 11
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No ratings available
Game Info
- Developer
- CenterPoint Gaming
- Publisher
- CenterPoint Gaming
- Release Date
- TBA