Compare ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired vs Razer DeathAdder V3

P1 ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
P2 Razer DeathAdder V3

Comparison Takeaways

ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired

Where It Has the Edge

  • wireless performance is 4.2 vs 1.0. Wireless performance is only supported in wireless-oriented evidence, mainly around dongle placement for reception and reliability.
  • Bluetooth support is 4.1 vs 1.0. Bluetooth support is consistently mentioned for the wireless or tri-mode versions rather than the wired-only setup.
  • ecosystem integration is 4.1 vs 1.0. ASUS ecosystem integration is supported by Aura Sync, AURA Creator, Gear Link, and references to the ROG device...
  • RGB features is 4.2 vs 1.1. RGB features are a consistent strength, including three-zone lighting on the original and reduced but configurable zones on...

Razer DeathAdder V3

Where It Has the Edge

  • weight is 4.8 vs 3.7. Low weight was one of the strongest points across reviews, with the mouse repeatedly measured around 57-59g and...
  • battery life is 5.0 vs 4.1. Battery life is not a practical concern because the mouse is wired, and reviewers framed the lack of...
  • motion consistency is 4.8 vs 3.9. Motion consistency was strong in the reviews that tested it, with no stutters or missed movements in normal...
  • FPS gaming suitability is 4.7 vs 4.0. FPS suitability was one of the clearest strengths because reviewers tied its speed, low weight, sensor, and simple...
Average score
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.2
Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
3.7
2.4GHz connectivity
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.1

Reviewers mention 2.4GHz support mainly in the wireless/tri-mode context, with the wired model retaining USB as the core experience.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
No score yet
acceleration control
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.2

Sensor specs list strong acceleration capability, though evidence focuses on maximum acceleration rather than deep acceleration tuning.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
4.7

Acceleration specs were strong, with reviewers citing high max acceleration and treating it as part of the mouse's competitive performance package.

Accuracy and tracking precision
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.2

Tracking precision is generally praised, with one review noting more modest MouseTester behavior while others report accurate gaming performance.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
4.7

Reviewers consistently found tracking accurate and precise, with multiple tests describing smooth aiming, stable movement, and dependable precision.

balance and weight distribution
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.3

Weight balance is described favorably where tested, especially the centered balance and improved maneuverability on the Core variant.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
3.8

Balance was acceptable but not perfect, with wired-cable weight making the mouse slightly top- or front-heavy in two hands-on reviews.

battery life
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.1

Battery life appears only in the wireless-oriented review evidence, which reports usable 2.4GHz and Bluetooth runtime figures.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
5.0

Battery life is not a practical concern because the mouse is wired, and reviewers framed the lack of battery maintenance as a benefit.

Bluetooth support
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.1

Bluetooth support is consistently mentioned for the wireless or tri-mode versions rather than the wired-only setup.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
1.0

Bluetooth support is absent, with reviewers explicitly noting the wired design has no Bluetooth support.

build quality
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.4

Build quality is a clear strength across several reviews, with repeated comments about excellent construction and few creaks or flex issues.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
4.7

Build quality was mostly excellent, with repeated praise for solid shells, no creaking, and strong wired-version construction.

button customization
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.5

Button customization is one of the strongest themes, driven by hot-swappable switches, remapping, macros, and software controls.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
4.2

Button customization through Synapse, remapping, Hypershift, and profile setup was useful, though the software experience itself was mixed.

button responsiveness
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.5

Button responsiveness is rated highly overall, with reviewers citing instant registration, tactile feedback, and easy activation.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
4.7

Button responsiveness was widely praised, especially the fast optical-switch feel and responsive click behavior in gaming.

cable flexibility
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.2

Cable impressions are mostly positive: the ROG paracord is flexible and light, though the wired model naturally remains tethered.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
3.8

Cable flexibility was one of the most divided attributes, praised by several reviewers but criticized by others as stiff, heavy, or merely passable.

charging convenience
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
No score yet
Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
5.0

Charging convenience is effectively excellent for users who accept a wire because there is no battery to charge or replace.

claw grip comfort
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.0

Claw grip support is present but context-dependent; several reviews say the high shape works, while one finds it limited by height.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
3.6

Claw grip comfort was mixed: some reviewers found it comfortable, while others said the slope or size made claw grip less natural.

click latency
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.6

Latency evidence is very positive, especially for wired use, with reviewers reporting instant presses and no significant input lag.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
4.8

Click latency was a major strength, with optical switches and high polling repeatedly tied to very fast or near-instant response.

click noise
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
3.9

Click noise is generally controlled, but swappable Omron switches can be noticeably louder depending on the chosen switch.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
4.3

Click noise was relatively restrained, with reviewers describing muted or quieter clicks rather than loud mechanical feedback.

connection stability
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.5

Connection stability is strong for wired use and supported by positive mentions of lag-free tracking and reliable 2.4GHz dongle placement.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
4.0

Connection stability was strong in normal wired use, but the highest polling settings caused stutters or compatibility issues for some reviewers.

cross-platform compatibility
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.3

Cross-PC use is best supported by Gear Link and onboard profiles, which let settings work on another PC after configuration.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
No score yet
DPI range
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.5

DPI range is a major strength on the original Gladius III, while the Core review notes a lower but still gaming-capable 12,000 DPI sensor.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
4.7

The 30K DPI ceiling and adjustable DPI stages give the mouse a very wide sensitivity range, though reviewers rarely needed the full maximum.

durability over time
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.5

Durability over time is supported by replaceable switches, spare parts, and high click ratings from 70 million to 100 million clicks.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
4.3

Durability over time looked promising from switch ratings and solid construction, though one reviewer questioned coating wear over years.

ecosystem integration
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.1

ASUS ecosystem integration is supported by Aura Sync, AURA Creator, Gear Link, and references to the ROG device ecosystem.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
1.0

Ecosystem integration is limited because the lack of RGB means no Chroma lighting integration for this mouse.

ergonomic design
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.3

Ergonomics are broadly praised for right-handed medium-to-large hands, though the shape can feel tall or narrow to some users.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
4.5

The right-handed ergonomic design was widely praised for comfort, palm support, and long-session usability.

fingertip grip comfort
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.1

Fingertip grip is possible and sometimes listed as supported, but the tall ergonomic body makes it less universally ideal than palm grip.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
2.6

Fingertip comfort was the weakest grip category because the body is large and tall, although a few larger-hand reviewers could use it.

firmware reliability
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.0

Firmware support is present through Armoury Crate, Gear Link, or firmware menus, though the reviews do not deeply test long-term reliability.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
No score yet
FPS gaming suitability
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.0

FPS suitability is good but not perfect: reviewers praise tracking and wired latency, while weight and shape limit elite FPS speed for some.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
4.7

FPS suitability was one of the clearest strengths because reviewers tied its speed, low weight, sensor, and simple layout to competitive play.

glide smoothness
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.5

Glide smoothness is a repeated positive, with PTFE/Omni feet producing smooth, effortless movement on tested surfaces.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
4.5

Glide smoothness was broadly praised thanks to PTFE feet and low weight, though a few reviewers swapped skates for preference.

grip texture
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
3.9

Grip texture is mixed-to-good, with grippy matte or serrated panels helping control, but one review notes absent rubberized grips.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
4.0

Grip texture was divisive: many liked the smooth grippy coating, while others found it slick, soapy, or insufficient without grip tape.

handedness options
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
2.9

Handedness is a limitation because the evidence repeatedly frames the mouse as right-handed or non-ambidextrous.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
1.0

Handedness is a clear limitation: the mouse is right-handed only, with no left-handed or ambidextrous version discussed.

left and right click quality
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.1

Main click quality is mostly strong thanks to tactile switches and good click feel, though one review reports button wobble.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
4.1

Left and right clicks were mostly liked for feel and low travel, though a few reviewers found them hollow or floaty.

lift-off distance
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.5

Lift-off distance is supported by Armoury Crate, where high and low lift-off distance options are available.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
4.6

Lift-off distance support was unusually strong, including asymmetric lift-off and landing cutoffs plus software tuning for advanced users.

long-session comfort
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.4

Long-session comfort is generally positive, helped by fatigue-free glide and shape, though hand size and grip style matter.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
4.5

Long-session comfort was strong for the right hand and larger grips, helped by the ergonomic hump and low weight.

macro support
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.4

Macro support is well covered through Armoury Crate and Gear Link, including macro recording and button-layer functions.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
3.4

Macro support exists but is limited, with reviewers mainly pointing to side-button macros and Hypershift rather than many dedicated inputs.

materials quality
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
3.9

Materials quality is solid but not luxurious: reviewers note hard plastic, matte plastic, and occasional oil or grip tradeoffs.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
3.6

Materials quality was mixed: reviewers liked the minimalist shell and coating, but some criticized the cable sleeving or cheap-looking underside.

MMO gaming suitability
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.8

MMO suitability is explicitly supported by the Core review, which calls SpeedShift useful for MMO players.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
2.2

MMO suitability is weak because the mouse has only a few extra macros and lacks the many side buttons MMO players often use.

motion consistency
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
3.9

Motion consistency is mostly good, but testing varies: one review reports smooth tracking while another records jitter at flick peaks.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
4.8

Motion consistency was strong in the reviews that tested it, with no stutters or missed movements in normal use and flawless tracking noted.

onboard memory
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.4

Onboard memory is a strength, with multiple reviews citing five profiles or built-in memory.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
4.1

Onboard memory was useful for profiles and settings, but at least one review noted that button assignments were not fully stored internally.

palm grip comfort
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.3

Palm grip is the best-supported grip style because reviewers repeatedly say the tall ergonomic body suits palm users.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
4.4

Palm grip comfort was a major positive, especially for medium-to-large or larger hands using the high ergonomic hump.

polling rate
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
3.9

Polling rate support reaches 1000Hz across the reviews, though one test calls polling performance average with jitter.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
4.3

The 8K polling headline earned praise for speed, but several reviewers noted system-resource demands or game stutter at the highest setting.

portability
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
No score yet
Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
2.5

Portability was a weakness because the mouse is large and wired, with a nonremovable cable and less bag-friendly design.

premium feel
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.2

Premium feel is tied more to ROG branding, construction, and presentation than to ultralight materials or understated styling.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
4.3

Premium feel came from the coating, minimalist finish, and light shell, though it is intentionally plain rather than flashy.

profile switching
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.1

Profile switching is supported through onboard profiles and profile buttons, although one reviewer wishes the control were more conveniently placed.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
3.9

Profile and DPI switching were supported through onboard profiles and bottom-mounted DPI/profile controls, though bottom placement was often inconvenient.

programmable buttons
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.3

Programmable buttons are well supported, with reviews describing six or seven configurable buttons and software remapping.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
3.8

The mouse has enough programmable controls for a simple FPS mouse, but reviewers emphasized that it is not feature-packed.

RGB features
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.2

RGB features are a consistent strength, including three-zone lighting on the original and reduced but configurable zones on the Core.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
1.1

RGB is essentially absent, with reviewers repeatedly noting no RGB lighting apart from a small DPI indicator in some descriptions.

scroll wheel quality
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
3.9

Scroll wheel quality is mostly positive for tactile detents and rubberized feel, but one review reports side-to-side wobble.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
3.6

Scroll wheel quality was mixed: some liked the smooth, easy action, while others wanted more defined detents or stronger tactility.

sensor performance
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.1

Sensor performance is generally strong and gaming-capable, though one wired review finds lower test performance than expected.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
4.8

The Focus Pro 30K sensor was treated as a core strength, repeatedly described as high-end, responsive, and reliable in gaming tests.

shape comfort
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.0

Shape comfort is divisive: many like the ergonomic Gladius shape, while others find it tall, chunky, or narrow.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
4.0

Shape comfort depended heavily on hand size and grip, with strong comfort for larger hands but problems for smaller, fingertip, or some claw users.

side button quality
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.2

Side buttons are generally usable and tactile, with convenient placement in one review but right-side/left-hand limitations in another.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
4.4

Side buttons were a recurring strength, often described as reachable, tactile, spacious, or well tensioned, with only one reviewer struggling with placement.

skate durability
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
3.8

Skate durability is only lightly supported through included replacement PTFE gliders, not long-term wear testing.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
4.3

Skate feedback was mostly positive for thickness, rounded edges, and corrected stock-skate feel, though one reviewer disliked Razer's default skates.

software stability
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.7

Software stability is strongest in the Gear Link review, where the tool is described as quick, reliable, and smooth.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
3.0

Software stability was mixed because basic settings worked for some reviewers, but high polling produced stutters or issues in several games.

software usability
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.0

Software usability is mixed-to-positive, with Gear Link praised, Armoury Crate usable, and one reviewer expressing mixed feelings.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
3.6

Software usability was mixed: some found Synapse intuitive and useful, while one reviewer strongly criticized it as bloated.

surface compatibility
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.3

Surface compatibility is well supported through calibration options for preset mousepads, new surfaces, and manual deskmat calibration.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
4.6

Surface compatibility was supported by PTFE feet and hands-on use across different pads, including glass and cloth-style surfaces.

switch durability
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.4

Switch durability is a core strength, with high click ratings and replaceable switches across several reviews.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
4.7

Switch durability was strongly supported by 90-million-click ratings and optical switch construction, with no major durability complaints in the reviews.

switch feel
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.4

Switch feel is a major positive, with tactile, responsive, snappy, and clicky descriptions recurring across reviews.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
4.4

Switch feel was generally positive, ranging from satisfying and crisp to soft or hollow depending on the reviewer.

tilt gesture controls
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
No score yet
Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
1.0

Tilt gesture controls are absent, with reviewers noting the scroll wheel does not support tilt functionality.

value for money
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.4

Value is favorable overall, with reviewers repeatedly emphasizing affordability, budget fit, or getting a lot for the money.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
4.5

Value was generally positive, especially at sale or standard wired pricing, though a few reviewers wanted more features for the money.

weight
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
3.7

Weight is mixed: lighter than predecessors or wireless variants, but still heavier than ultralight FPS mice.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
4.8

Low weight was one of the strongest points across reviews, with the mouse repeatedly measured around 57-59g and praised as easy to move.

weight tuning
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
No score yet
Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
1.0

Weight tuning is absent; the design favors fixed ultralight speed rather than adjustable weights or balance tuning.

wireless performance
Product 1: ASUS ROG Gladius III Wired
4.2

Wireless performance is only supported in wireless-oriented evidence, mainly around dongle placement for reception and reliability.

Product 2: Razer DeathAdder V3
1.0

Wireless performance is not a strength because this model is wired; reviewers repeatedly framed wireless as something the Pro version adds.