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I’m 75 percent certain that something has to do with the fact that the old drivers are 32-bit and MacOS has almost entirely phased out support for 32-bit anything, including drivers. This may involve fully quitting both WoW and the Battle. If that doesn’t work the first time, you may restart the game and have it work.run SetCVar(“enableWoWMouse”, 1) DetectWowMouse()
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So, my suspicion is that there’s something about the way that the WoW client for Mac interfaces directly with the mouse that either gets reset or changed by other USB devices you attach, which then makes it impossible for WoW to recognize it. Most mechanical keyboards are designed for gaming and thus have at least some form of extended N-key rollover for multi-key combo usage. Using a keyboard with full keyboard rollover, often called “N-key rollover” or “1xx key rollover” should help avoid that particular problem. Special note: Because of how OS X “sees” keyboards, a multibutton mouse using keyboard binds may cause you to not be able to press more than three keys at a time depending on your keyboard and/or mouse. If that fails, do the acceleration curve and then assign a specific keybind to each button as you desire, saving it as an application profile specific to WoW so that only WoW uses that setup and then inside WoW assign your keybind to the corresponding keyboard “key” each mouse button has been assigned in the third party software.Įxample: If you assign the middle (wheel) button to the “C” key in the third party software and want to use that as a keybind, inside WoW press the middle mouse button and it will show up as “C” for the keybind. This way WoW will see what the mouse provides and you can bind keys that way. If you go the third party software route, you should try setting up your acceleration curve and setting each button to whatever the software calls the “default” (basically letting the button be handled by the mouse itself). Uninstalling the SteelSeries software and drivers should then allow any third party HID control software to see the mouse and all of its buttons, and thus let you assign keybinds to them either in WoW or in the third party software.
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I love this dang mouse.Įven though the drivers are no longer working (at least properly) OS-wide, if they’re installed and loaded, software like Controllermate or USB Overdrive will not handle the mouse properly as its USB driver is preventing doing so.

It knows it’s a WoW Wireless Mouse, but there’s some sort of software block on it. It sees the mouse, but isn’t registering any button pushes above the default 4 buttons that MacOS can see.
