Average score
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.3
Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
3.9
2.4GHz connectivity
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.5

Direct connection evidence is limited, but the Nookyyy transcript states that the mouse can run over wired USB or wireless 2.4GHz. No reviewer raised a specific 2.4GHz reliability complaint.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
5.0

The mouse is repeatedly described as using Logitech Lightspeed or a 2.4GHz USB receiver, with support for high wireless polling. Evidence points to strong dedicated dongle performance rather than multipurpose wireless.

acceleration control
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
No score yet
Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
5.0

Direct testing references no acceleration, smoothing, or filtering, and reviewers describe consistent movement in shooters. This supports strong acceleration control for competitive play.

Accuracy and tracking precision
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.8

Tracking precision is described as excellent across several reviews: ProSettings saw no anomalies at 8000 Hz, Tom's Guide found movements predictable and stable, Nookyyy cited superior tracking performance, and Wasabi reported consistently good tracking on mouse pads.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
4.8

Reviewers consistently report precise tracking, accurate movement capture, and clean aiming behavior. The strongest evidence comes from pixel-level control, fast shooter use, and no jittering or dropped tracking.

balance and weight distribution
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.6

The weight and shape are repeatedly described as controlled and stable. ProSettings praised the pinched middle for finer control, Boardzy called the weight balance on point, Wasabi found it planted and stable, and another reviewer felt locked in immediately.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
4.6

Most reviewers who discussed balance found the light shell well distributed and easy to move. One review noted rear-heavy lift behavior, so balance is strong overall but not universally perfect.

battery life
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
3.8

Battery life is a mixed strength. Reviewers cite up to roughly 70-80 hours around 1K polling, but several note that higher polling rates drain the mouse faster and can require charging every few days.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
4.6

Battery life is a recurring strength, with many reviews citing roughly 90 to 95 hours and some reporting multiple weeks of normal use. Higher polling rates and optical-only switches can shorten endurance.

Bluetooth support
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
No score yet
Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
1.2

The reviews make clear that Bluetooth is not included. The mouse relies on Lightspeed wireless or wired USB-C use, which helps performance but limits multi-device convenience.

build quality
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.5

Build quality is generally strong, with several reviews calling the shell rigid, solid, or premium. One YouTube review reported a small side creak, so the overall picture is high quality with a possible unit-level QC caveat.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
4.7

Build quality is generally praised despite the very low weight. Reviewers reported solid plastic, no flex or rattle, sturdy construction, and durable-feeling shells, with only isolated scroll-wheel concerns.

button customization
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.4

Button customization is supported through the software/web interface. Reviews mention online button configuration, full key rebinding, bottom DPI-button programmability, and button mapping.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
4.3

Button customization is well supported through G Hub, including remapping, G-Shift, switch behavior, and programmable functions. The limitation is the small number of physical buttons available to customize.

button responsiveness
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.7

Button responsiveness is a major positive. Reviewers repeatedly describe the clicks as light, spammable, fast, responsive, or precise, although one review felt its particular switch implementation lacked character.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
4.3

Main button responsiveness is praised in most reviews, with quick, tactile, and satisfying clicks. Criticism centers more on side buttons and click feel preferences than on input response.

cable flexibility
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
2.6

Cable flexibility is a weak point. Tom's Guide and multiple YouTube reviews describe the included USB-C cable as stiff or draggy enough to interfere with wired use.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
2.4

Cable feedback is mixed to weak. Reviews note USB-C and wired use while charging, but several reviewers criticized the cable as rubbery, stiff, or not light enough for comfortable wired play.

charging convenience
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
3.2

Charging convenience is mixed. The mouse can be used while plugged in and one reviewer liked the larger USB-C port fit, but Tom's Guide found the charging cable awkward and another reviewer avoided it because of stiffness.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
4.6

Charging convenience is strong because the mouse can charge by USB-C, continue working while plugged in, and support PowerPlay-style wireless charging. One review found full charging time less impressive.

claw grip comfort
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.7

Claw grip support is one of the clearest strengths. Multiple reviewers with claw or aggressive claw grips found the shape comfortable, controlled, and well suited to relaxed or regular claw positions.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
3.5

Claw grip comfort depends heavily on hand size and grip style. Some reviewers liked the claw support and control, while others found the higher shape too large for regular or aggressive claw grips.

click latency
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
5.0

The click-latency evidence comes from Nookyyy's specification section, which lists 0 ms click latency. Other reviews also describe the clicks as fast and responsive, but only Nookyyy provides a direct value.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
4.5

Click latency evidence is favorable, including a 0.125 ms response-time claim and one measured 3.47 ms wireless result. Reviewers generally describe click response as fast enough for serious play.

click noise
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
3.2

Noise evidence is limited and mixed. ProSettings said the wheel gets louder when scrolling quickly, while another reviewer found the side-click sound loud and unpleasant.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
2.8

Click noise is noticeable. One review called the primary switches loud and clicky, while another treated the sound as preference-dependent rather than a performance flaw.

connection stability
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.6

Connection stability is supported mainly by performance testing language. ProSettings saw no anomalies even at 8000 Hz, and Wasabi reported the sensor/wireless use working properly during review.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
5.0

Connection stability is consistently positive in the supported reviews. Reviewers described the Lightspeed or 2.4GHz connection as stable, zippy, reliable, and free of notable wireless issues.

cross-platform compatibility
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
3.9

Cross-platform support is partial. Nookyyy says the mouse works with most USB 2.0-and-newer systems, but also notes that customization is not yet supported on macOS.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
2.0

Cross-platform flexibility is limited in the review evidence. The mouse lacks Bluetooth and is framed more as a dedicated gaming-machine mouse than a multi-system productivity device.

debounce customization
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.5

Debounce customization is well supported through the configuration tools. Reviewers mention adjustable debounce time, and one software walkthrough shows debounce time set to 0 ms by default.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
No score yet
dock compatibility
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
No score yet
Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
5.0

The mouse is repeatedly described as compatible with Logitech PowerPlay or PowerPlay 2. This gives it strong compatibility with Logitech’s charging ecosystem rather than a generic dock system.

DPI range
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.6

DPI range is strong on paper and configurable in software. Reviews identify the PAW3950/30,000 CPI or 30,000 DPI capability and mention DPI adjustment in the web interface.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
4.9

DPI range is a clear spec strength, with reviews citing 32,000 DPI at launch and 44,000 DPI after updates. Reviewers often treat the maximum as impressive but more than many players need.

durability over time
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.2

Durability evidence is favorable but not long-term definitive. Reviews cite durable design, strong build, no decay after weeks of use, and one reviewer felt it would hold out longer; one coating-wear caveat remains.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
4.5

Longer-term durability evidence is limited to reviewer use, but one month-plus review found no creaking, rattling, or flexing. The broader build-quality evidence also supports a durable impression.

ecosystem integration
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
No score yet
Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
4.5

Ecosystem integration is mainly Logitech-focused: G Hub, Lightspeed, PowerPlay, and onboard settings. Reviews praise the convenience when using Logitech’s receiver and charging accessories.

ergonomic design
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.5

Ergonomics are praised across grip styles. Reviewers describe a comfortable symmetrical design, support for different grips, hand-rest comfort, and finger placement that helps the mouse feel controlled.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
4.4

The ergonomic right-handed design is one of the most discussed changes. Many reviewers praised the contoured shape, though its right-handed asymmetry excludes left-handed users and does not fit every hand.

fingertip grip comfort
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
3.3

Fingertip grip is only conditionally recommended. Several reviewers suggest the smaller Maya or another large-fingertip option unless the user has medium-to-large hands or specifically wants a larger mouse.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
2.9

Fingertip comfort is mixed to weak. One review recommends it for fingertip users, but others found the larger, taller body less suited to fingertip control, especially for medium hands.

firmware reliability
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.5

Firmware reliability is positive in the limited evidence available. Hard-Gamer notes firmware updates are handled online, and another reviewer says an early battery-indicator issue was quickly fixed by firmware.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
3.3

Firmware reliability is mixed. Firmware updates add performance features such as higher polling, but one review ties firmware access to frustrating G Hub update behavior.

FPS gaming suitability
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.5

FPS suitability is strong. Reviews discuss Valorant, Fortnite, competitive gaming, and aim-trainer performance, with the mouse's low weight, responsive clicks, and high polling rate supporting competitive play.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
4.9

FPS suitability is very strong. Reviewers tested or discussed Counter-Strike, Call of Duty, Battlefield, Warzone, Helldivers, and other shooters, consistently tying the mouse to speed and precision.

glide smoothness
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.7

Glide smoothness is a consistent highlight. Reviewers repeatedly praise the stock feet as smooth, fast, low-friction, or among the best they have tried, with no need to replace them immediately.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
3.4

Glide smoothness is one of the more divided areas. Several reviews praised smooth PTFE glide, while enthusiast reviewers criticized the stock skates as slow, scratchy, or worth replacing.

grip texture
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.2

Grip texture is generally good but not perfect. Several reviewers call the coating grippy or improved, while others mention moisture pickup, smudges, or possible wear/cleaning challenges for sweaty users.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
3.7

Grip texture is mixed. Some reviewers found the coating grippy and stable under sweat, while others called the smooth shell slippery or too texture-light without grip tape.

handedness options
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
3.9

Handedness evidence describes an ambidextrous or symmetrical shape, though one source calls it right-handed symmetrical. The score reflects a broadly symmetrical shape rather than true left-side-button parity.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
1.7

Handedness is a major limitation. Reviews repeatedly describe the DEX as right-handed or right-hand-focused, with left-handed users directed toward other Superlight models.

left and right click quality
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.7

Main-click quality is repeatedly praised. Reviews describe the main clicks as implemented well, responsive, crisp, loved, or superior to competing clicks.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
4.6

Left and right click quality is strong. Reviewers praised the main clicks as clean, crisp, tactile, satisfying, and responsive, with only some variation in preferred click weight or sound.

lift-off distance
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.5

Lift-off distance is configurable and competitive. Reviews cite 0.7 mm support, LOD adjustment in software, and multiple lift-off options.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
3.3

Lift-off distance evidence is inconsistent. One review reported no adjustment option, while others found lift-off settings in G Hub, suggesting software version or menu differences across tests.

long-session comfort
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.3

Long-session evidence is positive but indirect. Nookyyy emphasizes extended gaming sessions through battery life, while Wasabi calls the mouse comfortable as a daily driver for general computer use.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
4.8

Long-session comfort is a strength for reviewers whose hands fit the shape. Several reviews mention hours of use, long stints, or long gaming sessions without fatigue.

macro support
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.5

Macro support is supported in the software. ProSettings, Tom's Guide, and another software walkthrough mention macro recording or macro controls.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
3.8

Macro support exists through G Hub, but the physical button count limits how useful it is. Reviews mention macro creation or setup, while one review notes the lack of dedicated macro buttons.

materials quality
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.2

Materials quality is generally good. Reviewers point to pure PTFE feet, a good-feeling plastic case, strong shell materials, and thickness that contributes to solidity.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
4.3

Materials quality is generally positive, with solid lightweight plastic, premium materials, and nicely joined parts. The low weight can reduce perceived premium heft for some reviewers.

MMO gaming suitability
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
No score yet
Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
2.5

MMO suitability is limited because the mouse has a straightforward five-button layout and lacks extra buttons. It can use G-Shift, but it is not aimed at MMO-style button density.

MOBA gaming suitability
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.6

MOBA suitability is supported by Tom's Guide testing in League of Legends, where the reviewer said the mouse worked very well in ranked matches.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
3.5

MOBA suitability has limited direct evidence. One DOTA2-focused review found the mouse usable but did not notice a dramatic advantage compared with shooters.

motion consistency
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.7

Motion consistency is a strength in testing and configuration. Reviews cite no anomalies at 8000 Hz, stable predictable movement, motion-sync controls, and strong sensor consistency.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
5.0

Motion consistency is strongly supported where discussed. Reviews cite accurate tracking of erratic movement and stable tracking during fast slides across large surfaces.

onboard memory
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
3.8

Onboard memory evidence is limited to the transcript's MCU/profile discussion. It supports stored profiles and CPI settings, but reviews do not deeply test onboard storage behavior.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
4.8

Onboard memory is well supported, with reviews citing onboard memory, onboard profiles, and settings saved to the device. This helps reduce dependence on software after setup.

palm grip comfort
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
3.5

Palm grip comfort is mixed by hand size and preference. One reviewer says palm grip feels good on the larger Maya X, while others recommend different options for users wanting a very full palm or using larger hands.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
4.3

Palm grip comfort is generally strong for the right hand, especially for larger hands. Some reviewers preferred it for palm grip, while one Tom’s Hardware review warned palm grippers may prefer a rival shape.

polling rate
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.7

Polling-rate support is a standout feature. Every major source that discussed specs points to 8K wireless polling or broad polling-rate options, often with the 8K receiver included.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
4.8

Polling rate is a standout feature, repeatedly cited at up to 8,000Hz over wireless. Reviewers praised the performance headroom but often noted that not every player will notice it and battery life can drop.

portability
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.1

Portability is supported by the low weight and included pouch/spare-feet package. The mouse is easy to carry, though the evidence is more about accessories than travel testing.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
4.7

Portability is helped by the very low weight and dongle storage. Reviews also praised the compact receiver setup compared with larger wireless polling accessories.

premium feel
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.4

Premium feel is mostly positive. Reviews call the unboxing premium, the mouse premium-feeling, exceptional, or close to its price in perceived quality.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
3.0

Premium feel is mixed in the limited direct evidence. One review initially found the lightness less premium, but later described quality becoming more apparent in use.

profile switching
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
3.8

Profile switching is only lightly supported by review text. The strongest direct evidence is the web-software mention of setting up profiles; deeper profile-switching behavior is not tested.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
2.9

Profile switching is functional but not ideal. The mouse supports onboard profiles and game-specific DPI, but multiple reviewers criticized the lack of a dedicated DPI or profile-switching button.

programmable buttons
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.5

Programmable buttons are supported through software. Reviews mention full rebinding and six programmable buttons, including the main buttons, wheel click, side buttons, and DPI button.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
2.9

Programmable-button support is constrained by the five-button layout. Reviews note remapping and programmable buttons, but several also point out the lack of extra functionality.

RGB features
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
No score yet
Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
1.3

RGB features are essentially absent. Reviews consistently mention no RGB or very little lighting, treating it as a battery-saving choice rather than a visual feature.

scroll wheel quality
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.5

Scroll-wheel quality is generally good. Reviewers describe it as tensioned correctly, light, tactile, distinct, and easy to click, with one dust/open-bottom caveat in ProSettings.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
3.7

Scroll wheel quality is mixed. Some reviews praise its notching, quiet steps, or resistance, while others describe mushiness, looseness, or inconsistency.

sensor performance
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.7

Sensor performance is consistently praised. Reviews identify the PAW/PixArt 3950 and describe stellar performance, superior tracking, perfect operation, or elite wireless sensor implementation.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
5.0

Sensor performance is one of the strongest areas. The HERO 2 sensor is repeatedly described as flawless, impeccable, ultra-responsive, and top tier.

shape comfort
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.6

Shape comfort is a core strength. Most reviewers liked the larger Maya X shape, especially for medium-to-large hands and claw or relaxed claw grip, though a few preferred the smaller Maya or noted edge/size preferences.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
4.1

Shape comfort is the biggest dividing point. Many reviewers loved the ergonomic feel and secure right-handed fit, while others found the hump, size, or side curves awkward for their grip.

side button quality
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
3.4

Side-button quality is the most uneven button area. Some reviewers found them crisp and accessible, but several reported stiffness, mushiness, or excess travel, especially on the top/front side button.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
2.8

Side button quality is the most consistent weakness. Some reviewers liked the placement or in-game use, but many described the buttons as mushy, high, soft, squishy, or weak.

skate durability
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.6

Skate durability has moderate support. Reviews mention spare feet for wear, smoothness after nearly four weeks, and stock skates that remained worth keeping, but there is no long-term months-long test.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
4.5

Skate durability has limited but positive evidence. One reviewer said the skates last a long time, although the same review and others criticized their initial smoothness.

software stability
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
3.9

Software stability is mixed. ProSettings and Wasabi found it working or loading fine, while Tom's Guide had slow, laggy app trouble and another review simply said the web driver gets the job done.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
2.8

Software stability is mixed to weak. Reviews mention G Hub quirks, high resource use, and crashes, even though basic configuration usually worked after setup.

software usability
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.1

Software usability varies by implementation. Web-based setup is praised for convenience and simplicity, but Tom's Guide criticized the companion app as slow, laggy, and ugly.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
4.0

Software usability is broadly useful but imperfect. G Hub provides DPI, polling, macros, button assignment, calibration, and presets, though reviewers mention quirks and frustration.

surface compatibility
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.6

Surface compatibility is strong. Reviewers mention use across a variety of surfaces, any mouse pad, textured pads, and consistent tracking on mouse pads.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
4.3

Surface compatibility is generally positive but not universal. One review says it glides over almost any surface, while another reports no glass-pad tracking issues across several pads.

switch durability
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.6

Switch durability is supported by the Omron optical switch rating evidence. Direct long-term switch testing is not provided, but the quoted rating is high.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
4.8

Switch durability evidence is positive but limited. Reviews mention reliable Lightforce switches and no double clicks or issues during testing.

switch feel
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.5

Switch feel is widely praised. Most reviewers describe the Omron optical switches as crispy, springy, light, fast, or precise, although one reviewer found the feel somewhat lackluster.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
4.6

Switch feel is a major strength for the primary clicks. Most reviewers praise the Lightforce switches as crisp, tactile, fast, and satisfying, though some find them loud or artificially tactile.

value for money
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.4

Value is rated positively at around $120. Reviewers cite strong specs, included accessories, competitive pricing versus big-brand alternatives, and a premium package, while noting cheaper budget mice exist.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
3.1

Value for money is mixed. Reviewers praise the performance and shape, but many call the mouse expensive and question the $160 or regional pricing against cheaper competitors.

weight
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.8

Weight is a major strength. Multiple reviewers measured or cited roughly 47-48 g and described the weight as excellent, amazing, or impressive for the larger shell.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
5.0

Weight is a defining strength. Reviews repeatedly measured or cited the mouse around 57 to 60 grams, often praising how light it feels despite the larger ergonomic shell.

weight tuning
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
No score yet
Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
3.5

Weight tuning is only indirectly supported. One reviewer reduced weight through modding, but the reviews do not describe a built-in adjustable-weight system.

wireless latency
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.7

Wireless latency is supported indirectly through click-latency, high polling, and responsiveness evidence. Reviews describe lightning-fast response and responsive button behavior in wireless/high-performance contexts.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
4.9

Wireless latency is a major strength. Reviewers connect Lightspeed, high polling, low latency, and fast response to snappy aiming and competitive responsiveness.

wireless performance
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.7

Wireless performance is consistently strong. Reviewers describe true 8K wireless operation, elite wireless implementation, and wireless performance that feels great or among the best.

Product 2: Logitech G PRO X Superlight...
5.0

Wireless performance is repeatedly praised. Reviewers reported strong Lightspeed behavior, no lag or hiccups, stable high polling, and confidence replacing wired gaming mice.