July 15, 2026

Clickbait, minus the clicking

Neverclick: Desktop application for performing mouse actions with your keyboard

This app wants to kill your mouse — and the comments are already fighting about it

TLDR: Neverclick is a free Windows app that lets people control mouse actions with a keyboard across almost any program. Commenters are split between hype over saving their wrists, skeptics saying real apps will still break the dream, and keyboard nerds insisting they already had this covered.

A new Windows app called Neverclick is making a very bold promise: what if you could stop using your mouse almost entirely and do clicking with your keyboard instead? It throws little labels over buttons, words, and interface bits on your screen, then lets you trigger clicks, switch windows, and even line up multi-step selections without touching the mouse. It’s free, works across apps, and leans hard into the fantasy of a faster, more ergonomic computer life. Naturally, the community instantly turned this into a mini culture war.

On one side, people were absolutely sold. One fan compared it to Vimium-style link hints “but for everything,” basically treating Neverclick like a superhero origin story for tired wrists. The big emotional sell here wasn’t just speed — it was relief. “So long carpal tunnel!” was the vibe, and you could practically hear keyboard devotees cracking their knuckles in celebration.

But the comments didn’t stay wholesome for long. A classic tech-world flex arrived almost immediately: “my keyboard can already do this.” One user waved the QMK flag, suggesting fancy programmable keyboards already cover this territory. Others were less impressed by the dream, warning that many apps are still a mess to control without a mouse, especially when dragging or awkward sliders get involved. Translation for non-power-users: the idea is cool, but real software can be stubborn and messy.

Then came the future-gazing. Linux users showed up like clockwork asking, in essence, “Cool, but when do we get ours?” So yes: Neverclick has landed, and the comment section is split between believers, skeptics, and people already rebuilding it on another operating system for sport.

Key Points

  • Neverclick is a free desktop application that lets users perform mouse actions with keyboard shortcuts and on-screen hints.
  • The application uses a default computer-vision mode called Neverclick Vision to detect UI elements from raw pixel data across applications.
  • It supports Window mode and Full Screen mode, plus keyboard-based window switching and multiple hint-selection methods including Dual Select, Multi Select, and Path mode.
  • An alternative mode called Clairvoyance uses operating system accessibility APIs, while Grid mode places evenly spaced hints for clicking blank areas.
  • Neverclick is currently Windows-only, supports multi-monitor setups, and lists upcoming features including scrolling, text highlighting, dragging, hint-based window switching, and moving windows between virtual desktops.

Hottest takes

"can do this out of the box" — squigz
"like Vimium link hints but for everything" — DarkIye
"So long carpal tunnel!" — DarkIye
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