It’s a tactile feedback system which uses different forces and vibrations to indicate a specific action. The best non-mobile examples that come to mind are the Xbox 360 and PS3 DualShock controllers. Various in-game actions trigger a sharp vibration in the controller. For instance, in a first-person shooter, the controller vibrates when you get shot.
In smartphones, of course, haptic feedback occurs when pressing the capacitive buttons and sometimes with other on-screen actions. For example, even with haptic feedback disabled, long-pressing on the home screen will trigger a subtle vibration.
Most people never give haptic feedback a second thought. It’s just something that happens when you press certain buttons. It’s a physical indicator that rattles your bones and lets you know you’ve pressed a button.
Note: As understood from various online sources, and learned from various tech experts. Not own words
An explanation post is due, will give all the references there in it
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Shoot it whatever you wanna say, but in a diplomatic way ;-)