Reviews repeatedly confirm 2.4GHz/Slipstream wireless support, usually positioning it as the faster gaming-oriented connection and often pairing it with dongle storage or low-latency claims.
The reviews support versatile 2.4GHz wireless use through dongles or receivers, often alongside Bluetooth and wired modes. Multiple reviewers describe easy switching or gaming-ready wireless setup.
Reviewers consistently describe the mouse as accurate and precise, with strong tracking for aiming, sniping, flicking, and competitive play. A few critiques focus on surrounding design issues rather than raw accuracy.
Tracking precision is one of the strongest findings. Reviewers repeatedly describe the mouse as accurate, smooth, stable, responsive, and dependable for gaming movements.
Weight distribution is mixed. Some criticism says the heavier M75 Wireless feels unbalanced or awkwardly distributed, while one M75 Air review reports good in-game balance.
Balance is directly praised in the reviews that discuss it, with the mouse described as well balanced and evenly weighted despite its light 61g body.
Battery life is generally praised, especially on Bluetooth or with RGB off. Air-focused reviews mention shorter 2.4GHz endurance, while M75 Wireless reviews often cite substantially longer figures.
Battery life is generally strong at the standard 1,000Hz setting, with several reviews citing about 90 hours. Reviews also note a major reduction when 4K polling is used.
Bluetooth support is widely confirmed and usually framed as a useful secondary connection, especially for longer battery life or non-gaming use, while 2.4GHz is treated as the preferred gaming mode.
Bluetooth support is consistently confirmed as part of the connectivity package, useful for casual, laptop, work, or non-competitive use alongside 2.4GHz wireless.
Build quality ranges from excellent to merely acceptable. Several reviews call the body solid with little flex, but a few Air reviews say the plastic feels cheap or not especially robust.
Build quality receives strong support. Reviewers describe the shell as rigid, sturdy, durable, well put together, and solidly constructed.
Button customization is a clear strength where iCUE is accepted: reviewers mention remapping, assigning commands, macros, side-button modes, and configuration through software.
Button customization is supported through NGENUITY features such as assigning functions, macros, and full button configuration. One review notes limitations in rebinding layers.
Button responsiveness is mostly positive, with reviewers describing quick, responsive clicks and strong in-game registration. Criticism is more about travel, noise, or side-button shape than responsiveness itself.
Button responsiveness is praised through tactile optical switches, quick actuation, and high-standard button engineering, with only minor preference-based caveats in some reviews.
Cable feedback is mixed. Some reviews call the cable decent or praise USB-C clearance, but others describe the cable as stiff or not as flexible as low-drag alternatives.
The included cable is described as braided, flexible, slack, or low-drag, making wired use less restrictive than a stiff cable would be.
Charging convenience is supported by USB-C charging, wired use while charging, and relatively short recharge times cited by several reviewers. Some setup and cable comments are less positive.
Charging is convenient because reviewers mention charging while playing, USB-C charging, a round dock connection, and one review cites a quick charge to 80% in 30 minutes.
Claw grip support is generally good, especially on the M75 Wireless and some Air reviews. A few reviewers with particular hand sizes found claw grip less ideal or needed adaptation.
Claw grip support is positive in the reviews that mention it, with both IGN and Wired finding the shape comfortable or natural for claw use.
Click latency is one of the stronger areas: reviewers mention zero-delay/zero-gap switches, near-instant response, unnoticeable delay, and debounce-free optical click behavior.
Click latency is strongly supported by instant-reaction, debounce-delay, and crisp-click comments. Optical switch behavior is repeatedly tied to fast input response.
Click noise is mixed. Several reviewers describe loud, audible, hollow, or noisy clicks, while others like the thocky character or find the primary buttons controlled enough.
Click noise is treated positively where discussed, with reviewers calling the clicks or switches satisfying, great-sounding, or producing satisfying audio feedback.
Connection stability is mostly positive, with many reviewers reporting no lag, no connectivity issues, or a solid wireless link. One review found wireless update-time spikes compared with Razer.
Connection stability is supported by repeated comments about no lag, no connectivity issues, no stuttering, and reliable behavior after standby or across modes.
Cross-platform compatibility is directly supported by Windows/macOS compatibility and a review noting use with computers or consoles, though this is not a major focus across the review set.
Cross-platform compatibility is mixed but supported: one review lists PS5 and Xbox support, another tested Windows 10 and 11, while a Dutch review notes NGENUITY is Windows-only.
Debounce-related customization is lightly supported through a button optimization setting rather than extensive debounce controls, so the evidence is narrow.
Dock compatibility has narrow support from one review, which describes the included round dock as extending the mouse reach and helping with wireless placement.
DPI range is strongly supported through repeated 26,000 DPI/26K references and 1-DPI adjustment mentions. The main criticism is hardware access to DPI changes, especially on the Air.
DPI evidence is broad, with reviews citing the 26K sensor, 26,000 DPI ceiling, DPI profiles, and DPI switching indicators.
Durability over time is supported by 100-million-click optical-switch ratings, warranty coverage, and durable cable comments. Long-term wear testing is limited.
Durability over time is supported by comments about a durable frame, long-lasting optical switches, and longevity without double-click issues.
Ecosystem integration is mainly through Corsair iCUE, system monitoring, Corsair peripheral consolidation, and onboard settings that reduce the need to keep software open.
Ecosystem integration is limited but positive, with support for HyperX ecosystem simplicity and OMEN Instant Pair noted in the reviews.
Ergonomic design is generally positive, with reviewers citing comfortable shapes, raised backs, grip support, and practical contours. Some large-hand or grip-specific critiques appear.
Ergonomics are mostly positive but shape-dependent. Reviewers praise refined ergonomics and light grip control, while some warn the form may not suit every hand.
Fingertip grip evidence is narrower but positive where mentioned, especially in Air reviews describing the shape as suitable for fingertip use or most grip styles.
Fingertip grip comfort is only indirectly supported through one review that tested different grips and found the mouse comfortable no matter the handling style.
Firmware reliability is mixed and limited. One review complains about needing the included cable for firmware/dongle setup, while another only notes firmware update options.
FPS suitability is one of the strongest themes. Reviewers repeatedly frame the mouse as fast, precise, responsive, and well suited to FPS or competitive shooter use.
FPS suitability is strongly supported by shooter-focused testing, including Counter-Strike, Valorant, Black Ops, and comments about fast-paced tracking and quick aiming.
Glide smoothness is widely praised, with many mentions of PTFE feet, smooth glide, low friction, and easy movement. A few heavier M75 Wireless critiques say glide is less effortless.
Glide smoothness is generally positive, especially with smooth or glass skates, though a few reviews say the stock glide is not the best in class.
Grip texture is mixed but generally serviceable. Matte or grippy coatings get praise, while some reviews call the sides slippery, smooth, or lacking grip for certain hands.
Grip texture is mixed. Reviewers praise the textured plastic and optional grip tape, but one found the included tape slick rather than grippy.
Handedness options depend heavily on variant. M75 Wireless reviews praise true ambidextrous support with side buttons on both sides, while Air reviews note right-handed limitations despite symmetry.
Handedness support is limited and mixed. Reviews describe a right-handed symmetrical design or a layout mainly aimed at right-handed gamers.
Left and right click quality is mostly positive for speed, tactility, and direct feel, though one critical review reports flex and poor implementation on its unit.
Left and right click quality is strong. Reviews mention good bounce, rapid reset, minimal play, light actuation, and enough resistance to avoid accidental double clicks.
Lift-off distance is supported by iCUE options and calibration references, with reviewers mentioning low/medium/high settings or liftoff-distance adjustment.
Lift-off distance is directly supported in software comments, with reviewers noting 1mm and 2mm options.
Long-session comfort is positive where tested, with reviewers citing all-day comfort, longer-period comfort, and limited hand or wrist fatigue in casual sessions.
Long-session comfort is supported by the light weight, reduced strain, wrist comfort, and marathon-session comments, though one review wanted more shaped long-term support.
Macro support exists through iCUE and button assignments, but several reviewers note the limited button count reduces macro-heavy usefulness.
Macro support is directly supported in multiple software discussions, including assigning macros in NGENUITY and configuring side-button macros.
Materials quality is mixed. Some reviews say the plastic shell still feels premium or not cheap, while others say the Air feels cheap or insufficiently robust for the price.
Materials quality is praised where discussed, with reviewers noting no cheap-feeling materials, no shell weakness, and solid plastic construction.
MMO suitability is weak. Reviews repeatedly say the limited button layout is not ideal for MMO/RPG-style play, though one review says the Wireless can work across a variety of games.
MMO suitability has limited support from IGN, which found the scroll wheel and extra buttons helpful in Final Fantasy XIV raid and dungeon play.
MOBA suitability is also limited by the sparse button layout. Some performance reviews include MOBA play, but broader comments say MOBA users often benefit from more buttons.
Motion consistency is strong where discussed, with reviewers citing smooth tracking, no wobble, no smoothing, and consistent response across aiming movements.
Motion consistency is strongly supported through stable path-of-motion, smooth micro-adjustment, and incremental movement comments.
Onboard memory is supported by single-profile storage and hardware assignment references, though reviewers often wish for more profiles.
Onboard memory is narrowly supported by the Windows Central review, which states that up to five DPI profiles can be stored on the mouse.
Palm grip comfort is generally positive, especially for the raised or high-backed shape. Some Air reviews caution that palm grip works better for certain hand sizes.
Palm grip comfort is weakly supported in a negative direction; IGN says the low palm area makes palm grip somewhat tough.
Polling rate evidence is extensive but mixed. Many reviews cite 2,000Hz support, while some say the practical benefit is limited or question whether the claimed rate is achieved.
Polling-rate evidence is extensive. Reviews confirm 4K support, but several also question how noticeable it is or note battery and measured-performance tradeoffs.
Portability is supported by dongle storage, multi-device connection comments, computer/console use, and the general benefits of wireless use.
Portability is supported through Bluetooth laptop use, productivity-on-the-go comments, and work-environment versatility, but one review notes the lack of a pouch.
Premium feel is mixed. Some reviews say the plastic shell still feels premium, but others describe the experience as below true high-end despite acceptable quality.
Premium feel is generally positive through comments about trustworthy quality, worthy feel, complete packaging, sleek presentation, and not feeling cheap.
Profile switching is weaker than software configuration overall. M75 Wireless has a DPI/profile button, but Air reviews repeatedly miss easy hardware profile or DPI switching.
Profile switching is supported by DPI cycling and user-set profiles, though coverage is narrower than the general DPI evidence.
Programmable-button feedback is mixed. The M75 Wireless offers more programmable buttons, while the Air’s sparse five-button setup is often criticized for limiting versatility.
Programmable buttons are supported through reprogramming and extra-button mapping, but one review characterizes the mouse as basic with no fancy buttons.
RGB features are variant-dependent. M75 Wireless reviews note RGB zones and customization, but several reviewers find them subtle or not very useful; Air reviews note little or no RGB.
RGB features are limited but present. Reviews repeatedly describe scroll-wheel-only lighting with customization or DPI indication, plus one software-related RGB issue.
Scroll wheel quality is mixed. Some reviewers praise tactility, grip, or resistance, while others call the wheel stiff, sluggish, scratchy, loud, or less suited to frantic gaming.
Scroll wheel quality is mostly positive, with firm notches, pronounced steps, satisfying clicks, positive feedback, and stable middle-click behavior.
Sensor performance is one of the most consistently praised areas, with repeated Marksman 26K references and strong reports of precise, fast, reliable tracking.
Sensor performance is consistently praised through 26K sensor references, smooth tracking, precision, responsiveness, and high DPI and IPS specs.
Shape comfort is generally positive, with reviewers praising the symmetrical or rounded shape and hand feel. Critiques focus on weight, hump placement, or fit for specific grips.
Shape comfort is highly preference-dependent. Some reviewers found it comfortable for their hands or grip, while others cautioned that size, palm grip, or shape will divide users.
Side button quality is sharply mixed. M75 Wireless reviewers like swappable/magnetic versatility, but some find the buttons too flush, fiddly, slick, loose, or hard to trigger.
Side button quality is mixed. Some reviews praise easy access, firmness, and bounce-back, while others criticize narrow, rigid, or uncomfortable side buttons.
Skate durability is weak. A few reviews report scratches or harsh criticism of stock skates, even when glide itself is often praised.
Skate durability has limited evidence and is a caution rather than a strength, with one reviewer warning that the optional tempered glass skates may shatter if dropped.
Software stability has notable negatives, including setup hassle and a report that iCUE reset Windows mouse settings. Evidence is limited but concerning.
Software stability has limited negative evidence: one review reported RGB control trouble until changing a Windows Dynamic Lighting setting.
Software usability is mixed-to-positive. Several reviews call iCUE easy, simple, or flexible, while others dislike relying on it for basic DPI and setup.
Software usability is mixed. NGENUITY is described as easy or straightforward for DPI, macros, polling, and lighting, but several reviews note limited advanced options.
Surface compatibility is generally good through surface calibration and broad tracking reports, but one review notes poor metal-surface performance.
Surface compatibility is supported by hard-mousepad and most-mousepad comments, with low-friction glide generally holding up across surfaces.
Switch durability is strong on paper, with repeated optical-switch and 100-million-click claims. Some reviews frame optical switches as more reliable than mechanical ones.
Switch durability is strong, with reviewers noting optical switches avoid double-click or debounce issues and are rated for longevity.
Switch feel is mostly positive, with reviewers describing tactile, crispy, thocky, quick, or immediate optical switches. A few click-quality issues appear elsewhere.
Switch feel is widely praised as tactile, crisp, springy, satisfying, and great-sounding, with optical switch feel a frequent highlight.
Value for money is one of the most divided areas. Reviewers praise discounted pricing or performance, but many criticize launch/MSRP pricing, limited features, or competition.
Value is the most mixed category. Some reviews call it competitive versus rivals, while others say cheaper Haste models are the better deal.
Weight is central to the review set. Air reviews praise the 60g ultralight design; M75 Wireless reviews see 89g as still manageable but meaningfully heavier.
Weight is a clear strength. Reviews repeatedly cite the 61g body and describe the mouse as light, ultralight, easy to maneuver, and comfortable.
Weight tuning is weak because a review explicitly notes that weight cannot be changed, and the broader review set does not describe adjustable weight support.
Wireless latency is mostly strong, with repeated sub-1ms, near-zero latency, and responsive-wireless comments. One review found update-time spikes or occasional sync concerns.
Wireless latency is strongly positive, with reviewers describing instantaneous response, zero noticeable latency, and quicker responsiveness than 1,000Hz setups.
Wireless performance is generally good, with reviewers praising low-latency wireless, multiple connection options, and responsive operation, though Air-versus-Wireless tradeoffs appear.
Wireless performance is very strong overall, with reviewers citing smooth 4K behavior, reliable wireless use, versatile modes, and no stuttering.