Comment by fkyoureadthedoc
1 month ago
Probably because they seem to be recreating the cursor on the webpage for that cool effect. Even on a good computer I have some input lag, and going from very low input lag and 120fps cursor to that it feels slightly off. Although I might be imagining it just because it looks different than the normal one...
Browser don't support replacing cursor images natively for obvious reasons. You have to use JavaScript for that.
CSS supports replacing cursor images natively.
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/cursor
In this case it looks like they didn't just want an image though, they wanted the cursor to invert the color of whatever part of the web page it's over, and to seamlessly morph into a selection highlight whenever you mouse over certain controls. Seems like that's a lot harder to make performant.
5 replies →
another thing to block in firefox userContent.css as there doesn't appear to be an option for it in about:config
The only obvious reason I can think of is security concerns (some sort of user confusion), but JS wouldn't help with that. What other reasons are there?