- Windows 11 24h2 had a strange bug that spoiled the mouse
- He returned the larger mouse cursor after the PC woke up from sleep (or was restarted)
- Microsoft apparently solved this problem with the July update
Microsoft would have corrected a Windows 11 bug, which made the mouse cursor have replaced irritatingly in certain circumstances.
Windows explained the nature of the bug and provided a video illustrating strange behavior. It shows that the mouse cursor is at its default size (which is “1” in the cursor in the mouse parameters), and yet clearly the cursor is much larger than it should be.
When Windows handled the cursor to enlarge the mouse cursor, then returns it to a size of “1”, the cursor ends up being corrected and returned to normal. Apparently, this problem manifests itself after returning to sleep on a Windows 11 PC.
Windows said that this bug has kicked Windows 11 24:2 hours from the arrival of last year), but the problem was not a constant thorn in its side. Apparently, this has only happened from time to time – but nevertheless, it was a continuous discomfort.
But more, because apparently with the July update for Windows 11, the problem was solved.
Analysis: mouse questions
Curiously, Microsoft has never recognized this problem, although other Windows 11 users certainly did it – Windows last was not alone in the hands of this bug.
I spotted a few reports on Reddit concerning the problem, and some posters knew the oversized cursor after restarting their machine rather than returning from the sleep mode (and there are similar complaints on Microsoft’s own help forums).
Be that as it may, the problem seems to be quite random in terms of moment or to know if it occurs, but the common point is a kind of change of state for the PC in terms of sleep or restart.
Although the changing size of the mouse cursor does not look like this big problem, it is actually quite disruptive. As the latest cursor observes on Windows, having an oversized cursor can make it more faithful and more difficult to select smaller menu elements in applications or Windows 11 itself.
And if you were not aware of the bypass solution mentioned – to go to the application of the settings, find the mouse size cursor and adjust it – you could end up restarting your PC to heal the problem. And it is if a restart corrects things, because, as some have noted, the restart can also cause the problem.
It was then a slippery problem, so it’s good to learn that it is now apparently resolved with the last update for Windows 11.