Clean, in my opinion and without reservations.
Windows 10 itself has become much, much better as far as having a massive component manufacturer produced driver library from which to select and making the correct selection.
While the above is not always the case, many component manufacturers are every bit as slow, if not slower, delivering updated drivers to the computer OEMs, so what you get in an OEM install from a recovery partition is often out of date to begin with and there are sometimes no newer options from the OEM, anyway.
These days I make a point of actually using my computer OEM's "service station" software that alerts me to available updates and also, in the case of Intel, their own Driver & Support Assistant since my machine has an Intel Bluetooth/WiFi card and they've been pushing out update after update after update for this under Windows 10 for over a year now.
I, personally, have never had Windows 10 pick a driver that is cranky on my system, but I know and have advised plenty of people who have not had the same experience about sourcing replacement drivers. And the sources for same are either the computer's OEM or the OEM of the component for which you need a replacement driver.
Third-party driver updater software is to be avoided at all costs.