Compare LAMZU Maya X vs Logitech G502 X Plus

P1 LAMZU Maya X
P2 Logitech G502 X Plus

Comparison Takeaways

LAMZU Maya X

Where It Has the Edge

  • handedness options is 4.1 vs 1.4. Handedness evidence points to a symmetrical or ambidextrous-style shape, though the mouse is not shown as offering left-handed...
  • click noise is 4.2 vs 2.4. Click noise is not a major concern in the available evidence, with one reviewer saying fast scrolling never...
  • weight is 5.0 vs 3.2. Weight is a standout strength, with repeated evidence around 47g to 48g and praise for how light it...
  • polling rate is 5.0 vs 3.4. Polling-rate support is a major strength, with multiple reviews confirming 8000 Hz wireless or customizable high polling rates.

Logitech G502 X Plus

Where It Has the Edge

  • charging convenience is 4.4 vs 3.6. Charging convenience is good thanks to USB-C, wired use while charging, and PowerPlay compatibility, but some reviews dislike...
  • palm grip comfort is 4.5 vs 3.9. Palm grip comfort is one of the best-supported strengths, with multiple reviewers calling the shape palm-friendly and comfortable.
  • battery life is 4.3 vs 3.8. Battery life is generally strong, especially with RGB off, but real-world runtime drops sharply with lighting on and...
  • side button quality is 4.0 vs 3.5. Side button quality is useful and configurable, especially the reversible sniper/DPI button, but several reviewers report accidental presses...
Average score
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.5
Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.0
2.4GHz connectivity
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.8

The reviews identify wired USB plus 2.4GHz wireless connectivity, with compatibility tied to USB-supported systems.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.5

Reviews consistently describe Lightspeed 2.4GHz dongle connectivity, receiver storage, and USB extender options, with no pairing difficulty noted.

acceleration control
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.2

Acceleration-related controls are present through companion-app options for ripple control, motion smoothing, and angle snapping.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.4

Evidence points to controlled tracking with no unwanted acceleration in one review and high acceleration ratings in others, though angle snapping is not adjustable.

Accuracy and tracking precision
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
5.0

Tracking accuracy is described as precise and stable, with review evidence pointing to predictable movement and precise tracking.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.7

Reviewers repeatedly report accurate, true, or smooth tracking across gaming and productivity, with no skipping or inaccuracy in extended tests.

balance and weight distribution
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
5.0

Weight balance is praised directly, with one reviewer saying the balance is on point despite the very low weight.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.0

Weight balance is somewhat mixed: one review says the balance improved over older G502 models, while another calls it a little back-heavy but not game-breaking.

battery life
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
3.8

Battery life is acceptable at lower polling rates but consistently becomes the main compromise at higher polling rates.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.3

Battery life is generally strong, especially with RGB off, but real-world runtime drops sharply with lighting on and varies by reviewer use.

Bluetooth support
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
No score yet
Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
1.1

Bluetooth support is a clear weakness: multiple reviews explicitly say the mouse does not have Bluetooth and relies on Lightspeed or wired use.

build quality
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.7

Build quality is broadly praised as premium, rigid, and solid, though one review reported a small creaking issue.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.5

Build quality is mostly praised as solid, sturdy, premium, and durable, even as some reviewers mention lighter-feeling materials or minor button jiggle.

button customization
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.8

Button customization is well supported through web or companion software, including button mapping and performance settings.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.2

Button customization is a major strength, with remapping, G-Shift, RGB zones, and program profiles, though some buttons are easy to misclick and G Hub can complicate setup.

button responsiveness
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.9

Button responsiveness is one of the stronger areas, with reviewers describing fast, responsive, consistent, and light-feeling clicks.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.5

Button responsiveness is rated highly, with reviewers praising tactile actuation, low force, satisfying clicks, and reliable in-game response.

cable flexibility
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
2.6

Cable flexibility is a weak point; multiple reviewers describe the included cable as stiff or draggy when used wired.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
2.6

Cable flexibility is a minor weakness because the included charging cable is described as a basic rubber cable rather than an extra-flexible premium cable.

charging convenience
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
3.6

Charging convenience is mixed: USB-C charging is straightforward, but the included cable can interfere with use while charging.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.4

Charging convenience is good thanks to USB-C, wired use while charging, and PowerPlay compatibility, but some reviews dislike the added cost or fiddly port placement.

claw grip comfort
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.9

Claw grip comfort is a consistent strength, especially for relaxed or aggressive claw grips and medium-to-large hands.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
3.7

Claw grip comfort is mixed: one review says the shape suits claw or hybrid grips, while others say claw users may prefer something less substantial.

click latency
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
5.0

Click latency evidence is favorable, including measured 0ms-relative latency and responsive switch impressions.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.5

Click latency is a strength, with hybrid optical-mechanical switches and Lightspeed tech described as fast, precise, instantly responsive, or lower latency.

click noise
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.2

Click noise is not a major concern in the available evidence, with one reviewer saying fast scrolling never becomes annoyingly loud.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
2.4

Noise is mixed to negative, especially around the scroll wheel and some buttons, which several reviewers call loud, noisy, or cheap-sounding.

connection stability
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.8

Connection stability is strong in the reviews that mention it, including no anomalies at 8000 Hz and positive wireless impressions.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.7

Connection stability is consistently strong, with reviews reporting no stutter, no skipping, seamless connection, and no meaningful wireless slip-ups.

cross-platform compatibility
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.0

Cross-platform compatibility is supported at a basic connection level for systems with USB 2.0 and above, with MacOS customization caveats.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.0

Cross-platform compatibility is modest but useful: G Hub is available for Windows and Mac, and onboard profiles help on multiple systems after setup.

debounce customization
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.9

Debounce customization is repeatedly supported through Aurora/web controls and a 0 ms default on optical switches.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
No score yet
DPI range
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
5.0

DPI support is high-end, with 30,000 CPI/DPI evidence and software control over DPI settings.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.8

DPI range is a strong point, with reviews repeatedly citing 100-to-25,600 DPI range, fine increments, presets, and quick DPI shift access.

durability over time
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.2

Durability impressions are mostly good, but the open-bottom design raises dust and longevity concerns for some reviewers.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.4

Durability over time has limited but positive evidence, including an 18-month user report and repeated references to more durable optical-mechanical switches.

ecosystem integration
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
No score yet
Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.3

Ecosystem integration is strong for Logitech users, with PowerPlay, Lightsync, shared Lightspeed receivers, Dynamic Lighting, and G Hub device management mentioned.

ergonomic design
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.8

The ergonomic design is praised through comfort grooves, a symmetrical layout, and broad grip-style support.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.5

Ergonomics are widely praised, especially for right-handed users, larger hands, palm grip, and long gaming sessions.

fingertip grip comfort
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
3.5

Fingertip grip comfort is more conditional; reviewers often point smaller or fingertip-focused users toward the smaller Maya or other options.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
3.5

Fingertip comfort is context-dependent; the mouse can work for fingertip grip but several reviews caution it is substantial and palm-oriented.

firmware reliability
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.5

Firmware handling is generally positive, with web-based firmware updates and a reported battery-indicator issue fixed by update.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
No score yet
FPS gaming suitability
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.7

FPS suitability is strong thanks to responsive clicks, high-end sensor behavior, low weight, and competitive-gaming praise.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.0

FPS suitability is mixed: DPI shift, accurate tracking, and fast response help shooters, but weight makes it a poor fit for highly competitive FPS play.

glide smoothness
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.8

Glide is one of the clearest strengths, with stock PTFE skates repeatedly called smooth, low-friction, and high quality.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.6

Glide smoothness is a standout strength, with PTFE feet repeatedly described as smooth, effortless, buttery, and low-friction.

grip texture
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.4

Grip texture is generally well liked, especially for sweat or warmer hands, though coating wear, smudges, and feel are noted as caveats.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.2

Grip texture is generally praised for rubberized textured sides, though one reviewer disliked the sticky rubber feel.

handedness options
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.1

Handedness evidence points to a symmetrical or ambidextrous-style shape, though the mouse is not shown as offering left-handed side-button options.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
1.4

Handedness options are weak because the mouse is repeatedly described as right-handed only, with no left-handed version.

left and right click quality
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.9

Left and right click quality is widely praised for crispness, consistency, and satisfying optical switch implementation.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.5

Left and right click quality is strong, with satisfying, tactile, non-mushy, and improved main clicks reported.

lift-off distance
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.6

Lift-off distance is configurable, with evidence for 0.7 mm, 1 mm, and multiple LOD options depending on review source.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.6

Lift-off distance has one direct test showing tracking stopped around 0.76mm, suggesting a low practical lift-off point.

long-session comfort
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.8

Long-session comfort is supported by comments about daily-driver comfort and long-gaming-session suitability.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.5

Long-session comfort is a strength for users whose hands fit the shape, with repeated praise for multi-hour comfort and extended-use ergonomics.

macro support
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.9

Macro support is available through software, with reviews mentioning macro recording or macro controls.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.5

Macro support is strong across reviews, with G Hub and assignments enabling macros for gaming, productivity, and app-specific workflows.

materials quality
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.8

Materials quality is rated highly through structural-integrity, premium-plastic, and dense in-hand feel evidence.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.7

Materials quality is praised where directly discussed, especially the high-quality plastic, rubber linings, and workmanship.

MMO gaming suitability
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
No score yet
Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
3.7

MMO suitability is mixed: there are enough programmable controls for lighter MMO/RPG use, but not enough buttons for dedicated MMO players.

MOBA gaming suitability
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.8

MOBA suitability has direct positive evidence from League of Legends use, where the mouse worked very well in ranked matches.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.2

MOBA suitability is positive but not specialized, with reviewers finding the button count useful for MOBAs and ability-heavy games.

motion consistency
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.8

Motion consistency is strong, with no 8000 Hz anomalies, stable tracking, and motion-sync controls in the software.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.6

Motion consistency is strong in normal play, with reviewers describing smooth accurate turning, no stutter, and consistency across slow and fast movement.

onboard memory
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
No score yet
Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.3

Onboard memory is generally strong, with up to five profiles, though one review criticizes Logitech’s implementation in G Hub.

palm grip comfort
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
3.9

Palm grip comfort is mixed: it can work well, especially for some hand sizes, but large-hand palm users may want a fuller shape.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.5

Palm grip comfort is one of the best-supported strengths, with multiple reviewers calling the shape palm-friendly and comfortable.

polling rate
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
5.0

Polling-rate support is a major strength, with multiple reviews confirming 8000 Hz wireless or customizable high polling rates.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
3.4

Polling rate is adequate but not cutting-edge: reviews note standard 1kHz operation and lack of 2kHz, 4kHz, or 8kHz options.

portability
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.5

Portability gets limited but positive support from the included carrying bag.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.4

Portability is helped by receiver storage and onboard profiles, though the shape and weight make it more portable-friendly than travel-focused.

premium feel
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.8

Premium feel is strongly supported through the unboxing, refined build, and price-appropriate in-hand quality.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.3

Premium feel is mostly positive, with reviews calling it premium, legendary, and well-equipped, while price and minor quirks prevent a perfect score.

profile switching
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.5

Profile support is present in the web software, though the evidence is limited to one review mention.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.4

Profile switching is useful, with onboard profiles, automatic app profiles, and quick profile cycling noted by several reviewers.

programmable buttons
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.9

Programmable buttons are supported, with evidence for six programmable buttons and full key rebinding.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.6

Programmable buttons are a defining strength, with reviewers repeatedly citing 13 controls, abundant inputs, and practical button layouts.

RGB features
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
No score yet
Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.1

RGB is visually praised and highly customizable, but it shortens battery life and some reviewers question paying extra for lighting.

scroll wheel quality
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.5

Scroll wheel quality is generally good, with praise for tension, grip, lightness, and tactile scrolling.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
3.6

Scroll wheel quality is polarizing: dual-mode scrolling is useful, but several reviewers criticize stiffness, wobble, loudness, backlash, or cheap feel.

sensor performance
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
5.0

Sensor performance is excellent across reviews, centered on the PAW/PixArt 3950 and consistently positive tracking impressions.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.7

Sensor performance is consistently excellent, with the Hero 25K sensor praised for precision, smoothness, reliability, and high-DPI capability.

shape comfort
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.8

Shape comfort is a defining strength, particularly for users who want a larger, formed, neutral symmetrical mouse.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.5

Shape comfort is strong for the right user, especially palm and larger hands, but not ideal for everyone.

side button quality
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
3.5

Side button quality is the most divisive button-related area, ranging from nearly perfect to stiff, mushy, or too much post-travel.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.0

Side button quality is useful and configurable, especially the reversible sniper/DPI button, but several reviewers report accidental presses or squeaks.

skate durability
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.6

Skate durability is supported by spare-skate inclusion and weeks of use without resistance, though long-term wear is not deeply tested.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
3.8

Skate durability has limited evidence: one review notes smooth PTFE feet but reserves judgment on long-term wear.

software stability
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
3.9

Software stability is mixed: Aurora/web controls are reported to work well, but one companion-app experience was slow and laggy.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
2.6

Software stability is mixed to weak where discussed, with reports of G Hub update friction and a possible DPI loop issue.

software usability
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.4

Software usability is mostly positive for web-based controls, but not unanimous because one review found the app slow and ugly.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
3.8

Software usability is divisive: several reviews call G Hub easy or intuitive, while others find it confusing, irritating, or unusable.

surface compatibility
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.8

Surface compatibility is strong, with evidence of smooth or consistent behavior across varied pads and surfaces.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.5

Surface compatibility is positive where tested, with reviewers noting effortless glide on most surfaces, poor pads, bare desks, and no environment-related hiccups.

switch durability
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.8

Switch durability is strong on paper, with Omron optical switches and 70-million-click evidence.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.3

Switch durability is expected to be strong due to optical or hybrid switches, though several reviewers note durability claims are not fully long-term tested.

switch feel
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.8

Switch feel is widely praised as crisp, light, fast, and satisfying, though one reviewer found the implementation less characterful.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.6

Switch feel is widely praised as clicky, tactile, crisp, satisfying, and mechanical-feeling.

tilt gesture controls
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
No score yet
Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
3.6

Tilt controls add useful extra inputs, but reviewers also note wheel wobble, tipping, or accidental side clicks.

value for money
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.6

Value is rated well because reviewers see strong specs, extras, and performance for the price, despite cheaper alternatives existing.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
3.4

Value is mixed: reviewers like the performance and features, but the $159 price and RGB premium repeatedly limit value.

water and dust resistance
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
3.8

Dust resistance is partially addressed through dust-cover and dust-proof encoder evidence, while no water-resistance evidence appears.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
No score yet
weight
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
5.0

Weight is a standout strength, with repeated evidence around 47g to 48g and praise for how light it feels.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
3.2

Weight is polarizing: lighter than older G502 models but still heavy compared with modern ultralight gaming mice.

weight tuning
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
No score yet
Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
1.3

Weight tuning is a weakness because the older adjustable-weight system is gone and no removable weights are included.

wireless latency
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.8

Wireless latency is treated favorably through responsive wireless impressions, instant-feeling clicks, and high-end polling behavior.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.7

Wireless latency is consistently praised as very low, imperceptible, or essentially wired-like for normal gaming.

wireless performance
Product 1: LAMZU Maya X
4.9

Wireless performance is one of the strongest areas, with 8K wireless operation and elite wireless implementation repeatedly praised.

Product 2: Logitech G502 X Plus
4.7

Wireless performance is a major strength, with Lightspeed praised as fast, stable, responsive, and close to wired behavior.