2.4GHz is repeatedly supported as a gaming-focused wireless mode, often paired with Bluetooth and wired use. Reviews connect it to low latency, strong signal, and flexible device setup.
Tri-mode connectivity is a recurring selling point, with many reviews explicitly confirming 2.4GHz support alongside Bluetooth and wired use.
One in-depth review explicitly reports no unwanted acceleration, backing a strong score here.
Accuracy and tracking precision were praised across game, sensor, and surface testing. Reviewers described precise movement, impressive accuracy, no faltering, and issue-free tracking.
Reviews consistently describe the Basilisk Mobile as accurate in use, with stable tracking and reliable pointer control for gaming and general work.
Balance evidence was direct but limited. Reviewers who discussed it found the center of mass well placed and the mouse evenly balanced in hand.
Battery life was generally strong, especially in Bluetooth mode. The 2.4GHz runtime around 40 hours was usable but occasionally framed as a tradeoff versus competitors.
Battery life is generally viewed as a strength, although one review reported faster drain than expected during mixed use.
Bluetooth support is clearly present and useful for flexibility, portability, and longer battery life. Several reviewers treated Bluetooth as less gaming-focused than 2.4GHz.
Bluetooth support is consistently confirmed and often framed as useful for travel, work devices, and broader compatibility.
Build quality is mixed. Some reviews found the shell solid for its weight, while others reported cheap feel, side flex, or durability concerns.
Build quality is broadly praised, with reviewers calling the shell solid, sturdy, or not flimsy.
Button customization is strong through Swarm II, with programmable controls, custom button functions, remapping, and saved profiles. The limited button count remains a constraint.
Customization is a major plus, with repeated support for remapping controls and tailoring behavior through Synapse.
Button responsiveness was mostly praised through crisp, precise, and meaningful clicks. One review noted the buttons were somewhat stiffer.
Button response is a recurring strength, with reviewers repeatedly calling the clicks crisp, clicky, snappy, or responsive.
The included cable was usually praised as flexible, soft, light, or malleable. One reviewer still felt wired use added some resistance compared with wireless.
Charging is convenient overall, with quick charging, play-while-charging, common USB-C charging, and wired fallback all supported in reviews.
Fast top-ups are a clear advantage, with multiple reviews repeating the 10-minutes-for-about-7-hours convenience claim.
Claw grip comfort is generally good, especially because of the rear hump and light body. Some reviewers found shape preferences could affect claw comfort.
The mouse gets direct praise for claw-grip support, with one reviewer also saying the same shape works naturally for palm grip.
Click latency support comes from optical switch speed and low-latency language. Reviewers described quick response, optical-speed feel, and light-speed detection.
Where latency is discussed, reviewers report low-delay clicking and no meaningful input lag during gaming.
Click noise is noticeable. Reviewers described clicky, lower-pitched, sharp, or loud clicks, with some users likely preferring quieter switches.
One reviewer explicitly says the click sound may be too clicky for very quiet spaces, so this is not a silent mouse.
Connection stability was a strength, with instant recognition, no issues, no dropouts, seamless switching, and no lag or skipping reported.
Where connection stability is addressed, reviewers report smooth operation and no notable lag issues across supported modes.
Cross-platform compatibility is supported by broad connectivity and direct Windows, Mac, and Android use without driver installation in one review.
Review evidence supports broad device compatibility across PCs, Macs, tablets, and phones, although one video noted Bluetooth switching friction.
Debounce customization is well supported in Swarm II through debounce controls, sliders, and zero-millisecond testing.
DPI range is broad, with repeated support for 26K DPI and several reviews confirming 50-to-26,000 DPI adjustment.
The cited 18K sensor range gives the mouse ample DPI headroom for both gaming and productivity use.
Durability over time is mixed. Switch ratings are strong, but some reviewers raised shell flex or long-term abuse concerns.
Ecosystem integration centers on Swarm II, ROCCAT continuity, Turtle Beach peripherals, migrated settings, and Easy Shift-style layering.
One video highlights Razer HyperSpeed multi-pairing, letting multiple compatible devices share one dongle within the ecosystem.
Ergonomic design was praised through palm fit, symmetrical shape, ergonomic button placement, and comfortable speedy handling.
Ergonomics are one of the clearest themes across reviews, with repeated praise for the thumb rest, contouring, and comfort-first shape.
Fingertip comfort was positive, with reviewers calling it a strong option and noting the lightweight smaller shape suits fingertip users.
Firmware reliability is mixed-positive. Updates were seamless or easy for some, while one review reported bugs resolved by firmware update.
FPS suitability is one of the strongest themes, with reviewers tying the light body, sensor, and flick-shot control to competitive shooters and FPS games.
The mouse is seen as capable for FPS play, though not everyone views it as the ideal choice versus lighter specialist options.
Glide smoothness was widely praised. Reviews described effortless, smooth, topnotch, and surface-friendly glide with useful skate options.
PTFE feet and easy glide come up often, with reviewers calling movement smooth across desks, pads, and other common surfaces.
Grip texture is mixed. The smooth shell and sweat/slip concerns are offset by grip tape and some positive texture comments.
Textured or grippy side surfaces are mentioned repeatedly and are generally seen as helpful for control.
Handedness is limited ambidextrous: the shape is symmetrical and usable either way, but side buttons and wording favor right-handed users.
Left and right click quality was strong overall, with tactile, deeper, snappy, and satisfying primary clicks, though one sample had uneven pre-travel.
Main clicks are described as consistent, light, and well suited to fast use, with no major complaints about left/right button quality.
Lift-off distance is supported through DCU and lift-off calibration, with reviewers mentioning adjustable or low/very-low settings.
Long-session comfort is supported by daily-driver comments, pleasant sessions, ergonomic fit, and light weight that reduces effort.
Long-session comfort is mostly positive for work and extended use, but one reviewer reported hand pain even during shorter sessions.
Macro support is available through Swarm II, with macro adjustment, built-in macros, keyboard-command mapping, and Easy Shift-style layers.
Macro creation is explicitly supported in Synapse, though only one review discussed it directly in detail.
Materials quality is mixed, ranging from pleasant satin plastic and solid shell comments to cheap, hollow, slippery, or thin-feeling plastic.
Materials impressions are positive overall, with matte and soft-touch finishes helping the mouse feel more refined than cheap.
MMO suitability is limited because reviewers repeatedly point to few remappable buttons and a simple layout rather than button-heavy control.
MMO usefulness gets limited but positive support thanks to the extra thumb controls and work-friendly button layout.
MOBA suitability has limited direct support from League of Legends testing, but reviews do not deeply evaluate MOBA-specific needs.
One review suggests the mouse handles MOBA-style play comfortably, citing use in League of Legends.
Motion consistency was strong, with little variation, no spin-out, no skipping, and motion sync or angle snapping options discussed.
One detailed test specifically says cursor movement stayed smooth and responsive, supporting strong motion consistency.
Onboard memory is clearly supported by five onboard profiles or storage for profiles in multiple reviews.
Onboard profile storage is directly confirmed, making it easier to carry settings without relying on software at all times.
Palm grip comfort is generally good but not universal. Several reviews found palm use comfortable or viable, with some shape caveats.
Palm-grip comfort is usually a strength thanks to the thumb rest and supportive shape, though one reviewer with larger hands disagreed.
Polling rate is a repeated caveat. The mouse supports up to 1,000Hz with lower settings, but several reviewers wanted higher polling options.
Reviews note up to a 1,000Hz polling rate over faster wireless modes, with lower-rate options available for battery-saving use.
Portability is helped by low weight, Bluetooth, dongle storage, and easy device movement.
Portability is the biggest mixed point: many reviews like the smaller bag-friendly size, while others say it still is not truly compact.
Premium feel is mixed: some reviews praised solid construction, while others found the shell hollow, cheap, or lacking premium extras.
Profile switching is supported through up to five DPI or saved profiles and multiple profile setup in Swarm II.
Reviews that mention profiles say configurations can be saved and switched for different tasks or programs.
Programmable buttons are present through six or seven configurable inputs, but the layout is not button-rich.
Reviews repeatedly mention a 10-button-style control setup with several remappable inputs, giving the mouse a strong programmable layout for its size.
RGB features are weak by design. Reviews repeatedly state there is no RGB beyond small indicator LEDs.
RGB is intentionally minimal: reviewers mostly note a single lit logo or front light rather than elaborate multi-zone effects.
Scroll wheel quality is mostly good but basic, with distinct notches and secure actuation alongside comments that it is standard or too small.
The scroll wheel is widely praised for accurate scrolling, four-way input, and the useful switch between tactile and free-spin modes.
Sensor performance was widely praised through the Owl-Eye 26K sensor, 650 IPS tracking, accurate behavior, and flawless tests.
Across written and video reviews, the sensor is described as precise and dependable, with no major complaints about raw tracking hardware.
Shape comfort is mostly positive but subjective, with praise for natural fit and some caveats around size, rear shape, and grip preference.
Shape comfort is mostly positive, but comfort depends on hand size and preference; one reviewer could not find a comfortable grip.
Side button quality was generally positive, with good thumb alignment, easy reach, clicky action, and clear separation.
Side buttons are generally useful and responsive, but some reviewers found the smaller layout easier to mis-click or harder to reach.
Software stability is mixed: Swarm II was reliable for some reviewers but buggy for another before firmware updates.
Only one review directly comments on stability, but it describes Synapse as stable and powerful once configured.
Software usability is mostly positive but not universal. Some reviews praised clear/simple controls, while others found platform or UI issues.
Synapse is generally described as easy to use and feature-rich, though one review called the software support solid but basic.
Surface compatibility was positive where tested, including any or almost any surface and multiple mousepads.
Surface compatibility is solid overall, with reports of good behavior on hard and soft pads plus several everyday desk surfaces.
Switch durability is strongly supported by the repeated 100 million click optical switch rating.
Multiple reviews cite 90 million-click optical switches, suggesting excellent switch longevity on paper.
Switch feel was a highlight, with tactile, snappy, satisfying, optical click feel across many reviews.
Switch feel is praised for crisp actuation and a satisfying, slightly damped click feel.
Value for money was mixed-positive, with several reviewers seeing fair pricing or savings while others noted stripped-down features.
Value is divisive: several reviews call it versatile and worth considering, but others say the price is too high for its portability compromises.
Weight is the defining strength. Reviews repeatedly emphasized 47g or sub-47g weight as unusually light for a mainstream wireless mouse.
Most reviewers praise the light feel or cite a roughly 76–77g weight, though it is still not ultralight by competitive-mouse standards.
Wireless latency was strong on 2.4GHz, with lag-free or no-perceivable-latency comments. Bluetooth was more often treated as a convenience mode.
One detailed review specifically highlights HyperSpeed as a low-latency wireless mode suited to faster gaming.
Wireless performance was reliable overall, with strong connection, flexible dual connectivity, device switching, and no dropouts.
Wireless performance is a strong point in the reviews that discuss it, especially over HyperSpeed or other faster connections.