The 2.4GHz connection was praised through an instant, fast connection experience with the included dongle.
Pros: macro support, fingertip grip comfort
Cons: weight tuning, cable flexibility
The 2.4GHz connection was praised through an instant, fast connection experience with the included dongle.
Pros: macro support, fingertip grip comfort
Cons: weight tuning, cable flexibility
Reviewers liked the low-latency 2.4GHz mode and receiver setup, especially when it reduced aim-related latency or supported a shared ROG receiver.
Pros: button responsiveness, cable flexibility
Cons: firmware reliability, MMO gaming suitability
2.4GHz connectivity was praised for easy pairing, reliable dongle use, and convenient switching alongside Bluetooth.
Pros: long-session comfort, balance and weight distribution
Cons: software stability, firmware reliability
2.4GHz Slipstream is a strength, with reviewers praising its solid, low-latency connection and high polling capability.
Pros: long-session comfort, sensor performance
Cons: handedness options, software stability
Reviewers who evaluated wireless setup praised the 2.4GHz path as the right performance-first choice, with stable low-latency behavior and easy receiver use.
Pros: durability over time, sensor performance
Cons: MMO gaming suitability, surface compatibility
2.4GHz connectivity was viewed as the preferred gaming mode thanks to fast, low-latency HyperSpeed use and dongle placement options.
Pros: motion consistency, sensor performance
Cons: software stability, MMO gaming suitability
2.4 GHz connectivity was praised as stable, solid, and more reliable for gaming use.
Pros: skate durability, cross-platform compatibility
Cons: handedness options, click noise
2.4GHz connectivity is usually praised for fast, stable, low-latency use, though one review had setup trouble.
Pros: click latency, fingertip grip comfort
Cons: firmware reliability, skate durability
2.4GHz connectivity was seen as simple and effective, with limited but positive opinionated evidence.
Pros: motion consistency, wireless latency
Cons: handedness options, onboard memory
2.4GHz connectivity was regarded as versatile and generally usable, though one reviewer found its polling-rate drop only adequate for slower games.
Pros: premium feel, Accuracy and tracking precision
Cons: software stability, FPS gaming suitability
One reviewer reported a real 2.4GHz adapter drawback, saying it could strain connected devices, so evidence for the wireless dongle was negative rather than broadly tested.
Pros: click latency, switch durability
Cons: Bluetooth support, handedness options