Average score
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
4.2
Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.1
2.4GHz connectivity
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
4.8

Reviews consistently identify 2.4GHz wireless as the main performance connection, often tied to the Omni receiver or polling-rate booster. The mode is treated as the best route for high polling and gaming responsiveness.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
5.0

The transcript support for this attribute points to the mouse using low-latency 2.4GHz wireless plus wired USB-C rather than Bluetooth.

acceleration control
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
5.0

Sensor acceleration handling is documented through repeated 50G acceleration specifications. The reviews support strong acceleration capability, though they do not describe a separate user-facing acceleration tuning feature.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.3

Multiple reviews describe Dynamic Sensitivity, mouse rotation, sensitivity matching, or acceleration-style tuning as useful pro controls, though a few note that these tools require practice or may not suit every player.

Accuracy and tracking precision
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
5.0

Tracking accuracy is one of the strongest areas: reviewers describe the sensor as accurate, precise, consistent, and difficult to disrupt across testing and gameplay.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.9

Reviewers consistently describe the mouse as precise, lag-free, and trustworthy, with several tying that accuracy to smooth cursor movement, clean inputs, and reliable tracking in games.

balance and weight distribution
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
4.8

Balance is described positively where tested, with reviewers noting solid balance and excellent weight distribution that does not tilt when lifted.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.7

The mouse is described as well balanced despite its low weight, with reviewers noting that its balance helps it avoid feeling dense, front-heavy, or awkward in hand.

battery life
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
3.6

Battery life is usable but not class-leading. Several reviews cite 70-hour 2.4GHz figures at 1,000Hz, while high polling and RGB reduce runtime substantially.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.8

Battery life is one of the strongest recurring positives: reviews repeatedly cite or validate long endurance at 1,000Hz, while also noting the sharp drop when 8,000Hz polling is used.

Bluetooth support
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
4.9

Bluetooth is repeatedly confirmed as present alongside 2.4GHz and wired modes. Reviewers treat it as a convenience mode rather than the main gaming connection.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
1.0

Reviews consistently state that Bluetooth is absent, so this scores poorly for Bluetooth support even though reviewers often accept the omission for an esports-focused mouse.

build quality
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
4.6

Build quality is a major strength in most reviews, especially the stiff carbon-fiber top shell, tight buttons, and lack of creaking or flex. A few critiques focus on the nylon/plastic lower section rather than structural weakness.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.6

Build quality is broadly praised, with reviewers noting sturdier sidewalls, little to no creaking or flex, solid construction, and a lightweight shell that does not feel fragile.

button customization
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
4.5

Button and performance customization are well supported through Armoury Crate Gear, Armoury Crate, and hardware controls. Reviewers cite remapping, DPI, polling, lift-off, lighting, and related adjustments.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.2

The mouse supports button remapping and related Synapse controls, but customization is limited by the simple physical button layout and bottom-mounted DPI control.

button responsiveness
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
4.9

Button responsiveness is generally strong, with many reviews praising precise, brisk, instant, or consistent actuation. One review reports a left-click pre-travel defect, so the evidence is strong but not perfectly uniform.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.8

Button responsiveness is rated highly because reviewers repeatedly describe clicks as snappy, quick, instantly registered, and suitable for fast gameplay.

cable flexibility
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
4.0

Cable impressions are mixed. Several reviews call the paracord-style cable flexible or lightweight, while others say it is stiff or not especially good.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
3.8

Cable feedback is mixed but generally acceptable: one review praises the included braided cable, while another frames the braided cable mainly as part of the dongle and charging setup.

charging convenience
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
3.9

Charging is handled through USB-C and wired operation. Reviews describe it as functional and convenient enough, though wired mode can have polling-rate limits depending on setup.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.0

Charging is reasonably convenient through USB-C and wired-use support, but reviews note that there is no dock-based charging option.

claw grip comfort
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
4.0

Claw grip support is broadly positive, especially for medium to large hands. Several reviewers identify claw as a natural fit, though smaller hands may find the mouse long or awkward.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.5

The mouse is described as workable for claw grip by reviewers who also emphasize its right-handed ergonomic shape and adaptable grip feel.

click latency
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
5.0

Click latency is presented as very low, helped by optical switches and high polling modes. Measurements and subjective comments support fast response, with little reason to worry about delay.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
5.0

The supported reviews describe click latency as extremely low or essentially absent, reinforcing its competitive-gaming focus.

click noise
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
3.1

Click noise is mixed. Some reviewers find the clicks pleasant or not annoying, while others describe the switches or side buttons as loud.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
2.3

Click sound is the clearest recurring complaint: several reviewers describe the main clicks as loud, hollow, pingy, metallic, or divisive even when they like the feel.

connection stability
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
4.3

Connection stability is mostly praised through stable wireless and strong receiver performance, but one review reports wireless disconnects during gameplay, making this a generally strong but not flawless area.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.6

Connection stability is a major strength, with reviews highlighting reliable wireless transmission, no drops, solid signal behavior, and useful dongle feedback.

debounce customization
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
3.0

Debounce support is mixed in a narrow way: optical switches allow very low debounce behavior, but multiple reviews note no user-adjustable debounce setting.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.4

Reviewers mention debounce delay improvements or debounce-related settings, usually in the context of optical switches and Synapse configuration.

dock compatibility
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
No score yet
Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
1.1

The mouse scores poorly here because reviews explicitly say it lacks charging-dock support or removed prior dock-style conveniences.

DPI range
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
4.9

The DPI/CPI ceiling is repeatedly cited at 42,000, with several reviews also discussing fine adjustment steps. The range is clearly flagship-level.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.9

The 45K DPI ceiling and fine DPI adjustment appear throughout the reviews, making DPI range one of the most heavily supported strengths.

durability over time
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
5.0

Durability evidence centers on structural integrity, carbon-fiber strength, and 100-million-click optical switches. Long-term field wear is not deeply tested, but the stated and observed durability signals are strong.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.3

Long-term durability support is positive but narrower, based mainly on optical internals, low-wear design choices, and comments that failures seem unlikely.

ecosystem integration
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
4.0

Ecosystem integration appears through the Omni receiver, shared ASUS dongle support, Armoury software, and ROG peripherals. Reviewers mention the benefit, though some question how many users will need it.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.2

Razer ecosystem support comes through Synapse and Razer Exchange, with reviewers treating software integration as useful for tuning and workflow features.

ergonomic design
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
4.0

Ergonomics are shape-dependent. The mouse is often comfortable for larger hands and safe grip styles, but some reviewers find the hump, length, or button height awkward.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.6

Ergonomics are a core strength: reviewers repeatedly praise the familiar right-handed DeathAdder shape, palm support, and comfortable sculpting.

fingertip grip comfort
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
3.9

Fingertip comfort is supported for some hands, but not universally. Larger hands or certain grip styles fare better; smaller-hand reviewers sometimes find the mouse too long.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
3.5

Fingertip comfort is more mixed than palm or claw grip because at least one reviewer found the larger ergonomic body less ideal for a fingertip-focused style.

firmware reliability
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
3.0

Firmware reliability is mixed because at least one reviewer received updates quickly but also saw sporadic 8K wireless shutoff behavior. The evidence points to active support with some remaining rough edges.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.0

Firmware support is directly mentioned in one review as part of unlocking or improving battery-life behavior, but this attribute has limited evidence.

FPS gaming suitability
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
4.8

FPS suitability is strong. Reviews repeatedly position the mouse around fast shooters, esports, low weight, fast inputs, and accurate tracking.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.9

FPS suitability is one of the strongest areas, with many reviews connecting the mouse to CS2, shooters, esports, precision aiming, fast clicks, and competitive play.

glide smoothness
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
4.5

Glide is a clear strength. PTFE and glass feet are described as smooth, fast, and low-friction, although glass feet may require adjustment.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.8

Glide is consistently praised through comments about PTFE feet, larger skates, fluid movement, smooth desk or mousepad travel, and effortless swipes.

grip texture
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
3.8

Grip texture is mixed. Carbon fiber is often grippy or secure, but the nylon/plastic sides can feel slippery to some reviewers, making included grip tape useful.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.4

The surface texture and included grip tape are usually praised for providing secure control, though a few reviews note oil marks or differing coating preferences.

handedness options
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
3.5

The shape is symmetrical, but handedness is limited by side-button placement. Reviews support basic ambidextrous hand feel while noting practical right-hand bias.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
1.3

Handedness scores low because reviewers repeatedly describe the mouse as right-handed only and not suitable for left-handed users.

left and right click quality
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
4.1

Left and right click quality receives strong praise in many reviews for tightness, tactility, and minimal wobble. A few units or reviewers report pre-travel, squishiness, or a defect, so results are not unanimous.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.3

Primary click feel is generally strong and well balanced, with reviewers praising responsiveness and actuation even when click noise is criticized.

lift-off distance
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
4.2

Lift-off distance is well covered through software and hardware controls. Reviews mention LOD adjustment, low/high settings, and surface calibration.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.3

Lift-off and landing-distance controls are supported through Synapse calibration, asymmetric cut-off, and Smart Tracking features.

long-session comfort
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
3.8

Long-session comfort depends on hand size and grip. Some reviews mention prolonged comfort, while others cite fatigue, palm irritation, or awkward shape details.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.7

Long-session comfort is supported by reviews describing comfort over extended use, pressure, sweat, fatigue, and long-term gaming or navigation sessions.

macro support
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
No score yet
Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.0

Macro and secondary-function support is present through HyperShift, Synapse, and Razer Exchange, although the limited button count constrains how much users can assign.

materials quality
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
4.9

Materials quality is one of the defining strengths. Reviews repeatedly highlight the carbon-fiber shell, premium construction, and stronger/lighter material story.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.1

Material quality is mostly positive due to recycled plastic, bio-based materials, rigidity, and texture, but one review notes the plastic can feel less premium.

MMO gaming suitability
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
No score yet
Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
2.0

MMO suitability is weak because the simple two-side-button layout is repeatedly described as insufficient for MMO players who want many commands.

MOBA gaming suitability
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
No score yet
Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.0

MOBA support is limited but positive where mentioned, with the mouse positioned as suitable for competitive play including League of Legends.

motion consistency
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
4.5

Motion consistency is supported by consistent sensor tracking, Motion Sync, stable polling, and smooth wireless behavior. One source notes Motion Sync is not user-configurable.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.8

Motion consistency is strongly supported by comments about smooth movement, accurate hand-to-cursor translation, stable tracking, and responsive motion.

onboard memory
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
5.0

Onboard memory is supported by reviews noting saved profiles and the ability to configure settings once, then use the mouse without keeping software open.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
No score yet
palm grip comfort
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
3.4

Palm grip comfort is mixed. Some larger-hand reviewers can palm or relaxed-palm it, while others say the mouse is short, irritating, or less suitable for palm use.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.3

Palm grip comfort is generally strong, especially for users who like the DeathAdder shape, though one reviewer with larger hands found full palm use less ideal.

polling rate
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
4.8

Polling-rate support is a standout feature, with repeated 8,000Hz references over wireless and, in some reviews, wired mode with the booster. Higher polling trades off heavily with battery life.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.9

Polling-rate support is one of the headline strengths, with many reviews citing 8K wired or wireless polling, Smart Polling switching, and high-performance modes.

portability
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
4.6

Portability is strong because many reviews mention the carrying case, travel case, or accessory storage. The missing onboard dongle slot is offset by the included case.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
2.3

Portability is a weakness because reviews often describe the large dongle, lack of Bluetooth, and travel inconvenience as compromises.

premium feel
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
4.7

Premium feel is strong in packaging, carbon fiber, accessories, and presentation. Some reviewers still feel the price makes the premium treatment hard to justify.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.5

Premium feel is supported by reviewers who describe the mouse as slick, technically impressive, and premium, even while noting its plain appearance or high price.

profile switching
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
5.0

Profile switching is supported through onboard profiles and hardware combinations. Reviews cite up to five stored profiles and mouse-based profile changes.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.4

Profile and polling-switching support is well documented through Synapse profiles, game-linked settings, Smart Polling Rate switching, and per-game behavior.

programmable buttons
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
3.7

Programmable controls are supported, but quantity is modest. Reviewers cite five to seven programmable inputs depending on whether scroll directions are counted.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
3.8

Programmable-button support exists, but reviewers frame the mouse as simple and sparse rather than button-rich.

RGB features
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
3.4

RGB is limited to the scroll wheel. Reviews confirm lighting is present and configurable, but repeatedly frame it as basic or restrained rather than elaborate.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
1.3

RGB scores very low because reviews repeatedly state that the mouse lacks RGB lighting or customizable lighting, often by design to save weight and power.

scroll wheel quality
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
4.2

Scroll wheel quality is mixed-to-good. Several reviews praise defined steps and tactility, while others find it stiff, small, recessed, or unremarkable.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.6

The optical scroll wheel is a major upgrade across reviews, with praise for precision, tactile steps, durability, anti-ghosting, and better reliability than older wheels.

sensor performance
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
5.0

Sensor performance is consistently excellent. Reviews cite the AimPoint Pro/PAW3950-class sensor, high DPI, accuracy, responsiveness, and reliable performance.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.9

Sensor performance is one of the highest-confidence strengths, with reviewers praising the Focus Pro 45K sensor, smoothness, speed, tracking, and high-end accuracy.

shape comfort
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
3.7

Shape comfort is divisive. The safe symmetrical shape works for many, especially larger hands, but multiple reviewers find it too long, awkward, or not ideal for their grip.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.3

Shape comfort is broadly positive because the familiar DeathAdder shell is repeatedly described as comfortable, safe, and well suited to many right-handed users.

side button quality
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
3.9

Side button quality is one of the most divided areas. Some reviews praise tactility and implementation, while others find the buttons too small, too far forward, loud, or less accessible.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.6

Side-button quality is a recurring strength thanks to better spacing, easier identification, responsive feel, and reduced accidental presses.

skate durability
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
2.5

Skate durability evidence is limited and cautious. One review warns glass feet can wear quickly, so smoothness is clearer than long-term skate durability.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
No score yet
software stability
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
2.4

Software stability is inconsistent. Reviewers appreciate lighter Armoury Crate Gear, but report pop-ups, installation confusion, download problems, and troubleshooting.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
2.9

Software stability is mixed: reviewers value Synapse features, but several mention bugs, bloat, firmware friction, or resource use.

software usability
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
3.2

Software usability is mixed. The lighter Gear app is simpler and useful, but several reviewers still call the software overkill, annoying, complicated, or frustrating.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.3

Software usability is mostly positive because Synapse exposes deep tuning for DPI, polling, lift-off, rotation, macros, and profiles, though some reviews still find it imperfect.

surface compatibility
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
5.0

Surface compatibility is strong, with reviews citing hard, soft, glass, cloth, wood, and calibration support. The sensor is repeatedly described as reliable across surfaces.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.4

Surface compatibility is well supported by testing across mousepads, desks, glass, and calibration features, with most reviews reporting reliable tracking.

switch durability
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
5.0

Switch durability is strongly supported by repeated 100-million-click optical switch ratings. This is one of the clearest durability claims in the reviews.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.8

Switch durability is strong thanks to optical Gen-4 switches, 100-million-click ratings, and comments about debounce or durability benefits.

switch feel
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
4.2

Switch feel is generally strong, with reviewers praising tactile, crisp, clicky, and consistent feedback. A minority find the clicks heavier, squishier, or not best-in-class.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.4

Switch feel is generally positive because reviewers praise lighter, crisp, firm, and consistent actuation, though this is separate from the louder click sound.

value for money
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
2.2

Value for money is the largest weakness. Nearly every review treats the mouse as expensive or niche, with some calling it hard to justify despite strong performance.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
3.4

Value is mixed: reviewers generally respect the performance, but many question the high price, especially for casual users or V3 Pro owners.

weight
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
4.9

Weight is a core strength. Reviews repeatedly cite 46-48g figures and emphasize the sub-50g feel, especially for a non-perforated carbon-fiber mouse.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
5.0

Weight is an overwhelming strength, with reviews repeatedly citing the 56g class body and praising how light it feels for a full-size ergonomic mouse.

wireless latency
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
4.7

Wireless latency is generally praised as very low through high polling, optical switches, and solid receiver performance. Some reviewers caution that 8K benefits are small.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.9

Wireless latency is consistently praised through 0.291ms claims, 37% lower latency references, low-latency observations, and high-end competitive wireless performance.

wireless performance
Product 1: ROG Harpe Ace Extreme
4.6

Wireless performance is broadly strong, with praise for stable, responsive 2.4GHz operation and high polling. One review reports disconnects, but most evidence is positive.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro
4.8

Wireless performance is a major strength, with reviews praising HyperSpeed Gen-2, the redesigned dongle, stable signal behavior, and fast wireless response.