Average score
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.4
Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.0
2.4GHz connectivity
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.6

Reviewers repeatedly note 2.4GHz wireless support, usually through Razer HyperSpeed or a dongle. Evidence also points to multi-device dongle use and, in some reviews, higher polling through optional accessories.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.5

Reviewers consistently describe the mouse as relying on Logitech's low-latency dongle or Lightspeed wireless path rather than broad multi-device wireless. The connection is treated as gaming-focused and stable, with no Bluetooth fallback.

acceleration control
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.7

The strongest evidence comes from sensor behavior and acceleration handling: one review reports tracking free of acceleration or jitter, while another highlights the high acceleration tolerance. This supports strong control for fast movement.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.7

The sensor specification is repeatedly tied to 88G acceleration and, in one review, zero smoothing, acceleration, or filtering. Reviewers frame this as part of the pro-grade tracking package rather than the main innovation.

Accuracy and tracking precision
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.7

Precision is one of the mouse’s clearest strengths, with reviewers describing accurate tracking, controlled aiming, faster movement tracking, and better in-game accuracy. A minority note high-DPI jitter or weight-limited aiming.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.6

Tracking and aiming precision are repeatedly praised. Reviewers report flawless sensor behavior, pixel-perfect tracking, stable movement across speeds, and sharper practical aiming, though one reviewer preferred a smaller mouse for accuracy because of shape.

balance and weight distribution
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.4

Balance is generally described positively, with centered or well-distributed weight. Some testers still felt front-heaviness or noted that the overall mass affects quick movement.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
2.9

Balance is one of the clearest mixed points. Several reviewers call out front-heavy weight distribution from the new haptic hardware, while only a few treat the familiar 61g weight as easy enough to adapt to.

battery life
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.5

Battery life is widely praised, especially over 2.4GHz and Bluetooth with lighting reduced or off. Reviewers also warn that RGB and high polling rates can cut runtime significantly.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.5

Battery life is generally viewed as strong. Multiple reviews cite roughly 80 to 95 hours or multi-day use, while noting that higher haptics, higher polling, or heavy clicking can reduce runtime.

Bluetooth support
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.7

Bluetooth support is consistently confirmed across reviews and is often framed as useful for work, travel, or switching devices. Bluetooth battery ratings are also repeatedly cited as a strength.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
1.0

Bluetooth support is consistently absent. Reviews that mention it treat the omission as expected for a competitive mouse or disappointing at the price, but no review indicates Bluetooth is available.

build quality
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.7

Build quality is treated as a premium strength, with reviewers reporting solid construction, no creaking, strong workmanship, and a tank-like chassis.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.7

Build quality is praised across reviews, with comments about a solid shell, premium construction, durable-feeling chassis, and sturdy lightweight design. The few criticisms focus more on balance, skates, or controls than core construction.

button customization
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.7

Button customization is a core advantage: reviews describe reprogrammable buttons, HyperShift layers, workflow shortcuts, and broad Synapse remapping.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.7

Button customization is one of the defining strengths. Reviews emphasize adjustable actuation, haptic feedback strength, rapid trigger behavior, independent left/right tuning, remapping, and G Hub configuration.

button responsiveness
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.7

Button responsiveness is rated highly, with fast actuation, minimal response time, and reliable in-game button behavior. The positive evidence is strongest for quick actuation and optical-switch response.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.6

Button responsiveness is the central performance win. Reviewers describe snappier clicks, faster response, lower measured or perceived latency, and quicker click behavior, though some stress that it will not replace skill.

cable flexibility
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
3.6

Cable impressions are mixed. Some reviews criticize stiffness or cable weight during wired use, while others praise the included cable as flexible, paracord-like, or durable.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
No score yet
charging convenience
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.5

Charging convenience is a notable strength when optional accessories are used. Reviews mention wireless charging, dock charging, magnetic placement, and quick USB-C top-ups, though some note extra cost or slower short top-ups.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.5

Charging convenience is strong, especially for users in Logitech's ecosystem. Reviews mention long intervals between charges, USB-C top-ups, PowerPlay compatibility, and wireless charging during use.

claw grip comfort
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.0

Claw grip comfort is mixed. Several testers found claw grip usable or comfortable, but others said the heavier, palm-oriented shape makes claw less natural.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.0

Claw grip feedback is mostly positive because the shape and optional grip tape can support it, although one reviewer used more claw because the G502X thumb rest was gone rather than because the shape was ideal.

click latency
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.7

Click latency evidence is strong where reviewers discuss optical switches, zero debounce delay, and debounce testing. The mouse is consistently presented as responsive enough for gaming.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.6

Click latency is the mouse's headline advantage. Reviews cite Logitech's up-to-30ms claim, lower reaction-time results, very low measured click latency, and the practical feel of faster shots.

click noise
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.6

Click and scroll noise feedback is mixed. Some reviewers praise quiet or satisfying clicks, while others call the Smart-Reel or scroll mode switching sound distracting.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.6

Click noise is generally praised for being quiet or virtually silent. Reviewers describe the haptic clicks as muted, less audible than standard switches, and pleasant for shared rooms, even if some users may miss a sharper click.

connection stability
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.4

Connection stability is mostly strong, with multiple reviewers reporting reliable HyperSpeed behavior and no faltering. One review reported occasional connection drops that were resolved by moving the dongle.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.6

Connection stability is a clear strength. Reviews report no drop-outs, lag-free Lightspeed performance, stable wireless use, and no interruption during play or testing.

cross-platform compatibility
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
3.7

Cross-platform and multi-device evidence is mixed. The mouse works across multiple devices and setups, but Linux support depends on community tooling and lacks official firmware-update support.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
3.3

Cross-platform support is mixed. G Hub support for Windows and macOS is cited, but the mouse lacks Bluetooth hot-swapping and one review notes Linux users are left out.

dock compatibility
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.5

Dock compatibility is frequently cited. Reviews mention Mouse Dock Pro support, charging pucks, wireless charging, and optional high-polling accessories, while noting these accessories cost extra.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.5

PowerPlay compatibility is repeatedly mentioned as a convenience advantage. The mouse can work with Logitech's charging mat or puck system, though this depends on staying inside Logitech's ecosystem.

DPI range
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.8

DPI range is very high, with 35,000 DPI repeatedly cited for the 35K model. Reviewers generally see the ceiling as technically impressive but more than most users need.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.8

The DPI range is consistently described as very high, typically 100 to 44,000 DPI. Reviewers treat it as a flagship spec even when noting that most players will use much lower settings.

durability over time
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.3

Durability over time has limited but direct support from long-use comments and long expected lifespan claims. Most stronger durability evidence overlaps with build quality and switch ratings.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
3.2

Durability over time is uncertain. Reviewers like the solid build and the no-physical-switch concept, but several explicitly note that long-term HITS durability or quality control cannot yet be proven.

ecosystem integration
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.5

Ecosystem integration is strong for Razer users, with Chroma lighting sync, multi-device dongle support, Synapse profiles, and other Razer gear integration repeatedly mentioned.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.2

Ecosystem integration is a strength for Logitech users. Reviews connect the mouse to G Hub tuning, Lightspeed wireless, PowerPlay charging, sensitivity matching, and profile or settings sharing.

ergonomic design
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.7

The mouse is consistently described as ergonomic and right-handed, with thumb support and a contoured shape. Comfort-focused design is one of the most repeated positives.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.3

Ergonomic design is mostly positive because the Superlight-style shell is familiar and comfortable. Criticism centers on size for smaller hands, lack of left-side symmetry in the buttons, or shape preferences.

fingertip grip comfort
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
3.4

Fingertip comfort is mixed to weak because the mouse is heavy and palm-oriented. Some reviewers could use fingertip grip, but others found it awkward or too heavy.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
3.5

Fingertip grip comfort is mixed. Some reviews include fingertip or hybrid grips in the supported range, while others say pure fingertip users or small-mouse fans may prefer another shape.

firmware reliability
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
No score yet
Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
3.4

Firmware reliability is mixed and lightly evidenced. Reviews report a smooth firmware update or no hitches, but also mention wake-from-sleep DPI delay or settings behavior that needs software running.

FPS gaming suitability
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
3.5

FPS suitability is mixed. The sensor and clicks are capable, but the weight makes the mouse less ideal for competitive or fast-flick shooters.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.6

FPS suitability is one of the strongest use cases. Reviews repeatedly tie the low-latency clicks, rapid trigger, 8K wireless, and precise tracking to shooters like Counter-Strike, Valorant, Call of Duty, and Battlefield.

glide smoothness
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.7

Glide quality is generally positive, with reviewers describing smooth movement, soft glide, and PTFE feet. Surface choice still matters, especially on harder desks.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
3.7

Glide smoothness is mixed. Some reviewers report effortless or butter-smooth gliding, while several mouse-focused reviewers criticize the stock skates as slower, not smooth enough, or better on glass than cloth.

grip texture
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.5

Grip texture is a major strength, with repeated praise for rubberized sides, textured surfaces, secure thumb support, and control during long sessions.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.1

Grip texture is mixed-to-good. Several reviewers praise the matte texture or optional grip tape, while others find the shell a bit slick without tape.

handedness options
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
2.6

Handedness is a limitation because the shape is clearly right-handed. Reviewers repeatedly note that left-handed users are not served by this design.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
2.5

Handedness options are limited. The shell is symmetrical, but the side buttons are left-side only, so left-handed users do not get a true ambidextrous control layout.

left and right click quality
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.4

Left and right click quality is mostly good, with minimal wobble, fast action, and solid travel. One review found the main clicks a little squishy compared with other Razer mice.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.5

Left and right click quality is strongly praised because the HITS buttons feel tactile, tunable, and unusually satisfying once powered. A few reviewers still prefer older mechanical clicks or note the sensation takes adjustment.

lift-off distance
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.7

Lift-off distance control is well supported through Synapse and sensor features. Reviewers mention consistent lift-off behavior, asymmetric settings, and adjustable lift-off distance.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
3.7

Lift-off distance is configurable but not deeply praised. Reviews mention lift-off settings in G Hub, though one notes the lack of precise measurement and others treat it as part of broader sensitivity controls.

long-session comfort
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.6

Long-session comfort is a clear strength for users who fit the shape. Reviewers praise reduced fatigue, easy long sessions, and comfort across work or gaming marathons.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.3

Long-session comfort is generally positive. Reviews cite comfortable extended use, long gaming sessions, and reduced fatigue, though comfort still depends on grip style and shape preference.

macro support
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.7

Macro support is strong through Synapse and HyperShift. Reviews describe macro recorders, full macro functionality, and assigning complex commands to buttons.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.0

Macro support is available through G Hub, with several reviews mentioning recorded macros or assignable functions. The main limitation is the relatively low button count.

materials quality
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.5

Materials quality is good, with evidence for high-quality rubber, premium surface feel, and durable-feeling finishes. The strongest direct evidence comes from Phantom White and long-use impressions.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.5

Materials quality is praised through references to high-quality plastics, smooth durable chassis feel, satin or matte texture, and premium lightweight construction.

MMO gaming suitability
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.2

MMO suitability is good but not absolute. Reviewers value extra buttons, HyperShift, wheel inputs, and macro support, while noting it has fewer buttons than a dedicated MMO mouse.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
2.8

MMO suitability is weak-to-mixed. One review says the mouse can handle World of Warcraft, but several point to the low button count as a drawback for RPG/MMO-style players who need many inputs.

MOBA gaming suitability
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.2

MOBA suitability is also good because reviewers cite MMO/MOBA targeting, programmable inputs, and utility for complex games. It is not positioned as a pure MOBA specialist.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.4

MOBA suitability is positive when the game rewards fast clicks. Reviews cite MOBAs or click-heavy RTS play as places where rapid trigger and light actuation can still feel useful.

motion consistency
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
5.0

Motion consistency is strongly supported where tested, with reviewers reporting perfect consistency, stable tracking, and no acceleration or jitter problems.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.7

Motion consistency is supported by flawless tracking, no dropouts, stable movement plots, and consistent sensor behavior across swipes and micro-adjustments.

onboard memory
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.6

Onboard memory is supported through five saved profiles or onboard profile storage. This helps preserve DPI and profile setups without constant software use.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
3.7

Onboard memory is inconsistent across reviews. Some say up to five onboard profiles or internal memory are supported, while another reports that settings did not save to the mouse without G Hub running.

palm grip comfort
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.6

Palm grip is the mouse’s best-supported grip style. Reviewers repeatedly praise palm comfort, thumb support, and a shape that encourages full-hand contact.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.0

Palm grip comfort is mixed-to-positive. Some reviewers say the palm is well supported or fits perfectly, while another says palm is not ideal because of the low, slim shape.

polling rate
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.5

Polling-rate support is strong, though accessory-dependent for the highest rates. Reviews cite 1,000Hz by default and 4,000Hz or 8,000Hz with supported dongles or docks.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.7

Polling rate is a flagship spec. Reviews repeatedly cite 8,000Hz wireless operation, with some noting wired mode is capped at 1,000Hz or that many players may still choose lower polling for battery or compatibility.

portability
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.0

Portability is moderate. Bluetooth, dongle storage, and device switching help, but the large, heavy body is less travel-friendly than compact lightweight mice.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.4

Portability is helped by onboard dongle storage and a travel-ready lightweight shell. Reviewers specifically call out the stored receiver and suitability for players moving between setups.

premium feel
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.6

Premium feel is strong, with reviewers describing a high-end, feature-packed, solidly built mouse with refined design and a premium overall impression.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.3

Premium feel is strong, with reviews describing the mouse as premium, well-made, high-performing, and advanced. The same evidence also reinforces that the premium price is a major consideration.

profile switching
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.5

Profile switching is directly supported by the underside profile button and onboard profile behavior. Evidence is narrower than for broader customization, but defensible.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.2

Profile switching is available but not always hardware-direct. Reviews mention dual profiles, per-game profiles, G Hub profile controls, and workarounds for DPI/profile switching because there is no dedicated DPI button.

programmable buttons
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.7

Programmable buttons are one of the product’s major strengths. Reviews repeatedly cite 11 to 13 programmable controls, extra inputs, and secondary layers.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
3.9

Programmable buttons are supported through remapping, macros, and assignments. The main limitation is that the mouse has few physical buttons compared with more feature-rich gaming mice.

RGB features
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.6

RGB features are extensive, with underglow, logo lighting, scroll-wheel lighting, Chroma zones, and ecosystem syncing repeatedly mentioned. Battery drain is the main caveat.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
1.0

RGB features are essentially absent. Reviewers repeatedly note no RGB lighting, usually framing it as a clean design or a battery-life benefit rather than a customization feature.

scroll wheel quality
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.7

Scroll wheel quality is a standout feature. Reviews praise the four-way tilt, free-spin and tactile modes, Smart-Reel behavior, and productivity usefulness, though some dislike the mode-switch sound.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.2

Scroll wheel quality is mostly good but not unanimous. Some reviewers call it solid, precise, phenomenal, or marvelous, while others report looseness, mushiness, or release issues.

sensor performance
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.8

Sensor performance is excellent overall. Reviewers describe flawless tracking, high accuracy, strong surface handling, and a technically impressive Focus Pro 35K sensor.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.6

Sensor performance is highly praised. The Hero 2 sensor is described as precise, proven, exceptional, and capable of flawless tracking, with high DPI and polling specs backing it up.

shape comfort
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.4

Shape comfort is strong for the intended hand sizes and grip styles, especially with the thumb rest and contoured right-hand form. Some users find it narrow or palm-biased.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
3.8

Shape comfort is familiar and generally safe, especially for users who already like the G Pro/Superlight shell. Reviews still flag size, boxiness, and personal shape preference as important caveats.

side button quality
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.6

Side button quality is generally positive. Reviewers describe the side buttons as easy to reach, tactile, light, crisp, and less prone to accidental activation.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
3.5

Side button quality is mixed. Some reviewers find the side buttons tactile and usable, while others call them traditional, mushy, or underdeveloped next to the new main clicks.

skate durability
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
No score yet
Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
2.7

Skate durability and stock skate quality are mixed-to-weak. Some reviews like the longevity angle, but several criticize the feet for slowing, flattening, or needing replacement.

software stability
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.4

Software stability is mixed but mostly improved. Some reviewers praise stable Synapse behavior, while others still call Synapse imperfect or note occasional quirks.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
3.5

Software stability is mixed. Some reviewers had no hitches or called the setup flawless, while others found settings behavior or G Hub dependence frustrating.

software usability
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.3

Software usability is powerful but sometimes complex. Reviews praise deep control, Synapse options, DPI and scroll settings, but also mention confusing setup or overwhelming menus.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.0

Software usability is mostly positive, with G Hub described as clear, straightforward, easy to navigate, and useful for HITS tuning. The main criticisms are lack of web configuration and general G Hub dislike.

surface compatibility
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.6

Surface compatibility is strong. Reviews cite tracking on varied surfaces, glass support, Smart Tracking, and high precision across mouse pads, with only harder desks raising concerns.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.2

Surface compatibility is generally good for tracking, with reviewers mentioning cloth, glass, fabric, and hard plastic surfaces. The stock skates are more divisive across surfaces than the sensor itself.

switch durability
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.6

Switch durability is well supported through repeated references to Gen-3 optical switches rated for 90 million clicks.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
3.8

Switch durability is promising but not proven. Reviewers note the lack of traditional switches and theoretical reduction in mechanical wear, but Logitech's lack of click-rate figures leaves long-term certainty open.

switch feel
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.6

Switch feel is generally positive, with tactile, snappy, crisp, or fantastic feel reported by reviewers. One source notes main-click squishiness separately under click quality.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.5

Switch feel is a major strength after adjustment. Reviewers describe the haptic clicks as fantastic, tactile, convincing, clean, and customizable, while still noting they feel different from traditional switches.

value for money
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
3.1

Value for money is the most disputed area. Reviewers like the feature set, but many criticize price, upgrade value, or the cheaper older Basilisk V3 Pro.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
3.3

Value for money is the biggest tradeoff. Reviewers often accept the premium because the tech is genuinely new, but many still call the price high or say casual players can get strong mice for less.

weight
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
3.1

Weight is the biggest recurring drawback. Reviewers often cite roughly 112g to 115g and say it limits fast FPS movement, even when balance or comfort helps.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.3

Weight is generally good at about 59 to 61 grams. Reviewers treat it as lightweight for a mouse with new internal tech, though some ultralight enthusiasts would prefer something lighter.

weight tuning
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
No score yet
Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
2.7

Weight tuning is limited. Reviews mention small configuration weight changes from pucks or covers, but there is no real adjustable-weight system like traditional weight tuning.

wireless latency
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.5

Wireless latency is generally strong, supported by low-latency HyperSpeed, high polling options, and reviewers saying wired and 2.4GHz feel hard to tell apart.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.7

Wireless latency is excellent. Reviews cite low-latency 2.4GHz/Lightspeed operation, 8K wireless polling, zero perceived latency, and extremely low measured response.

wireless performance
Product 1: Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K
4.5

Wireless performance is strong overall. Reviews cite rock-solid HyperSpeed, reliable 2.4GHz behavior, low-latency play, and occasional dongle-placement sensitivity.

Product 2: Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
4.7

Wireless performance is strong. Reviews point to sturdy wireless connectivity, stable Lightspeed use, no interruption, and high polling over wireless.