The Deiog G11 is positioned as an entry-level to mid-range gaming mouse designed for professional gaming and ergonomic utility. While the hardware itself offers mechanical switches and adjustable DPI (Dots Per Inch), the full utility of the device is gated behind proprietary PC software. Unlike major manufacturers (e.g., Logitech or Razer) which utilize centralized, cloud-based driver hubs, devices like the G11 often rely on specific, locally hosted executable files. This creates a friction point for consumers who have lost the original installation media. This paper serves to bridge the gap between hardware ownership and software implementation.

You download "G10_G11_G12_All_in_One.zip" – 14.2 MB. Small, which is good. You extract it. Inside is a folder with a single executable: Setup.exe, a README.txt (which is just a single line: "Install, run, enjoy"), and a mysterious Config.dat file.

Your antivirus (Windows Defender) immediately lights up: "Unknown publisher. Are you sure you want to run this?"

This is the moment of truth. You scan the file with VirusTotal. 1 out of 65 antivirus engines flags it as "Riskware." That’s likely a false positive—common with mouse macro software that injects keystrokes.

You take a deep breath and run Setup.exe as Administrator.

Once launched, the software window is divided into four main tabs. Below is a feature breakdown.

Officially, the Deiog G11 Mouse Software is Windows-only. Mac users can try running it via Wine or Parallels Desktop, but button mapping is unreliable. Linux users can use generic tools like Piper (with libratbag) if the G11 uses a standard PixArt sensor, but advanced RGB control is not guaranteed. For full functionality, stick to Windows 10 or 11.

Downloading drivers for lesser-known peripheral brands poses a cybersecurity risk.

Because Deiog is a value-oriented brand, their software is typically hosted on generic driver aggregators or their official support site. Always scan any downloaded file with Windows Defender or your antivirus.

Recommended Download: Search your favorite search engine for “Deiog G11 driver” – look for links from drive.google.com (their official backup) or trusted driver databases like DriverPack or Station-Drivers. Alternatively, check the QR code on your mouse’s bottom sticker.

Direct file names to look for:

Yes — the Deiog G11 includes 128KB of onboard storage. This means once you save a profile, you can uninstall the software, plug the mouse into another PC, and your DPI, macros, and RGB will stay the same.