
The Logitech Chaos G900 represents the best of the best of Logitech. The Best High-end Gaming Mouse Logitech G900 Chaos Spectrum We’ve compiled a list of our favorite gaming mice to hopefully save you some time. With options galore, you can lose yourself in research for days and still struggle to produce an answer. With that said, finding the perfect mouse can be challenging. Our gaming mouse guide includes what we believe are the best gaming mice for budget gamers, MMO/MOBA gamers, FPS gamers, and more! In this guide, we’ll be listing the best gaming mice on the market in 2019. A quality gaming mouse can competently deliver your precise controls onto your opponents, elevating your winning chances. But in order to translate your honed gaming acumen into sensational victories, your peripherals must be on par. Choosing between the two comes down to personal preference: do you want a super light gaming mouse that doesn’t have a flashy design or much in the way of customizable buttons or would you rather have a more tweak-friendly mouse with a more ergonomic feel in the palm? For fans of the G502 Hero, the choice is clear.We all know that a powerful gaming rig is the baseline for competitive gaming. It has the same Lightspeed wireless tech found in the G502 Lightspeed, along with the Hero (High Efficiency Rating Optical) sensor that can scale between 100 and 16,000 DPI.
#THE BEST GAMING MOUSE 2019 PRO#
If you’re comparing different wireless gaming mice, you should know that Logitech’s G Pro Wireless mouse, our current favorite, is practically the same offering.

I personally like a heavier mouse because I tend to flick it around recklessly during a firefight, much to the amusement of friends and confusion of adversaries. The wired version weighs 139g with all of its weights installed. The new model includes 16 grams of additional weights (two 4g weights, four 2g weights), totaling up to 130g.

Also, likely due to constraints in the G502 Lightspeed’s design, it’s noticeably lighter than the wired version. I found the scroll wheel on the G502 Hero to be just a little too slippery, so this is a good change. Its scroll wheel has some extra grip by way of a rubber coating. There were a few other things that popped out about the mouse. Logitech’s G Pro Wireless is practically the same mouse But it’s your only option unless you purchase the PowerPlay wireless charging mouse pad for $99. For the time that it takes to recharge, you’ll have a wired mouse on your hands. When you do need to charge, the G502 Lightspeed includes a braided Micro USB cable to plug in. Obviously, how many hours you spend gaming in one day will dictate how often this mouse needs to recharge. Initially, I was worried that it wouldn’t last through a weekend of testing, but several days have passed without much in the way of a flinch on the battery indicator. I don’t own a PowerPlay mouse pad at home, so if you’re like me, this mouse’s 48-hour battery life is another factor that you’ll have to mull over. I still suck at Apex: Legends, mind you, but this mouse didn’t make me suck any more than usual (or less, unfortunately). The highest praise that I can give to a wireless mouse is that latency didn’t once come to mind while I played some games. (Its included USB adapter has a report rate of 1ms.) During my time with it, those claims seemed to hold true the G502 Lightspeed has the level of responsiveness that I come to expect from a wired mouse.
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Its Lightspeed wireless capability claims to deliver “better than wired” performance when it comes to latency. Photo by Amelia Holowaty Krales / The Verge Even if you decide against the PowerPlay and are generally against mixing wireless mice with gaming, the G502 Lightspeed might tick enough boxes to make it a worthy purchase for you. Priced at $149, Logitech is charging an almost $100 premium for these two big features, and one of them can only be enjoyed by those who also own the $99 PowerPlay wireless charging mouse pad.

Its feet are the only pieces that could be salvaged from the old design. Logitech told me it was scared to change basically any facet of the mouse, but it said that it had to change almost everything internally in order to fit in its new low-latency Lightspeed wireless tech and add the ability to wirelessly charge by way of its optional PowerPlay wireless charging mouse pad. Oh, and its Lightsync LEDs light up in some very nice ways. At first glance, it doesn’t look very different it still has 11 customizable buttons, it includes a range of weights to tweak how quickly (or slowly) the mouse can be dragged along your mouse pad, and it’s still comfortable to use for hours on end. Logitech’s new G502 Lightspeed is a wireless version of the company’s beloved G502 Hero gaming mouse that’s available today.
