Humanity is an open-source publisher whose sole offering, AntiMicroX, occupies a narrow but essential niche in Windows gaming utilities. The tool presents a drag-and-drop canvas where every keyboard key, mouse axis, scroll direction, and even scripted macro can be attached to any button, stick, trigger, or gyro input from XInput, DirectInput, Switch Pro, DualShock, and generic USB controllers. Typical use cases include resurrecting legacy titles that pre-date modern gamepad support, adding analog movement to isometric RPGs, remapping twin-stick shooters for left-handed play, or converting an inexpensive wired pad into a flight-stick replacement for space simulators. Because profiles are exported as portable XML files, entire control schemes can be swapped in seconds before launching a game, shared with the community, or synced across multiple PCs. The mapper runs unobtrusively in the system tray, consumes minimal resources, and respects Windows security boundaries by requiring no elevated rights. Humanity’s software is available for free on get.nero.com, where downloads are delivered through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always install the latest upstream build, and can be queued for batch installation alongside other applications.