Compare Corsair Scimitar RGB Elite Wired vs Glorious Model D3
Review evidence consistently confirms 2.4 GHz wireless use through the receiver or dongle, with rated battery figures and high polling support tied to that mode.
The acceleration evidence was limited to one technical test, where the reviewer could not make a precise acceleration measurement but found the behavior within range.
The only direct acceleration evidence is the specification table listing 50G max acceleration; no review gives hands-on acceleration-control testing.
Reviewers consistently described tracking as accurate, precise, and smooth, with no major tracking complaints in the supporting reviews.
Reviewers repeatedly describe the D3 as precise, accurate, and responsive in play, with only one review noting minor wireless tracking consistency fluctuation under certain conditions.
Balance was praised despite the mouse's size, with reviewers describing it as well balanced or immaculately balanced.
Balance feedback is mixed: one review barely noticed the battery's effect, while another felt extra rear weight and said the mouse was not perfectly balanced.
Battery feedback centers on the swappable system. Rated figures are high, but some testing found much shorter runtime at high polling rates or with full features enabled.
Bluetooth is clearly supported across the review set and is associated with multi-device or tri-mode use, though reviewers generally emphasize 2.4 GHz for gaming.
Build quality was widely praised, with reviewers calling the mouse solid, stout, reinforced, sturdy, or finished to a high standard.
Build quality is mostly positive, with high-quality finish and solid construction noted, though one hands-on force test found some side flex on the Model D shape.
Button customization was a core strength because the side keypad can slide forward or backward and button functions can be configured in software.
Customization is a clear strength: reviewers mention assignable mouse buttons, a customizable dock button, DPI controls, key binding, and reprogrammable controls.
Button responsiveness evidence was positive, with reviewers reporting instant ability triggers and responsive mechanical side buttons.
Button responsiveness is positive overall, with direct response, quiet clicks, and no in-game issue from minor physical give reported.
Cable flexibility was mixed: some reviewers praised the braided cable as flexible, while others found it stiff, hard, or bungee-worthy.
Charging convenience is a major theme. Reviewers highlight swappable batteries, a charging base, Guardian battery fallback, and quick battery changes without cable dependence.
Claw grip comfort was mixed: some reviewers with suitable hands liked it, while others said the design mainly favors palm grip rather than claw.
Claw grip evidence is positive but limited. Reviews mention suitability for claw users and one practical comfort impression, while the D3 is more often discussed as an ergonomic palm-friendly shape.
Latency evidence was positive where tested, with reviewers noting no noticeable delay or no real difference compared with reference hardware.
Latency impressions are strong. Reviews describe ultra-low latency, no lag, no delays, and no detectable responsiveness difference between wired and wireless use.
Click noise evidence was limited but positive, with one technical reviewer saying the main clicks were quieter than other mice.
Click noise is mixed: one reviewer found the mouse very quiet, while another said the optical switches were not particularly quiet.
Connection stability is a strength. Reviewers report no dropouts, no disconnections during battery swaps, and uninterrupted fallback behavior, with one firmware-related battery switching caveat.
Compatibility is broad at the connection level through 2.4 GHz, Bluetooth, and wired modes, but one review notes the software itself is currently Windows-only.
Debounce customization is directly supported in software, with reviewers noting debounce time or bounce-time settings alongside other performance controls.
The dock is central to the product experience. It charges batteries, hosts the receiver, shows status, and adds controls, although one reviewer saw the extra PC connection as a downside.
Reviewers repeatedly cited the high DPI ceiling, usually 18,000 DPI on the Elite, as a major spec even when noting most players will use far lower settings.
DPI support is strong, with up to 30,000 DPI, fine adjustment increments, dock or mouse controls, and software-configurable levels.
Durability over time was mixed: switch ratings and multi-month or multi-year use were positive, but scroll-wheel and wear concerns appeared in long-term reviews.
Durability evidence comes mainly from optical switches rated for 130 million clicks and reviewers noting solid construction, not from long-term ownership testing.
Ecosystem integration was supported by iCUE syncing with other Corsair parts and Corsair-device lighting/profile control.
The mouse, Guardian battery, dock, receiver, and Glorious Core software are presented as a cohesive ecosystem with status lights, battery management, button control, and saved settings.
Ergonomic design was praised for the contoured body, ring/pinky rest, and comfort, though some reviewers noted limits for small hands or non-palm styles.
Ergonomic feedback is mostly positive for the D3, especially for right-handed comfort, although one reviewer disliked the RGB gap enough to avoid using the D3.
Fingertip grip comfort was weak because reviewers associated fingertip use with fatigue, large-hand requirements, or poor fit for the mouse's size.
Fingertip-grip evidence is positive but narrower, with reviews naming fingertip suitability and comfort alongside palm and claw grip support.
Firmware reliability is mixed: updates are supported, but one review reports battery-switching issues that Glorious was working to fix through firmware.
FPS gaming suitability was mixed to negative: some reviewers found it serviceable, but many said weight, shape, and side buttons make it less ideal for shooters.
FPS suitability is supported by fast, precise aiming, low latency, lightweight handling, and explicit praise for fast FPS games and gaming performance.
Glide smoothness was generally positive, with multiple reviewers describing smooth gliding, low resistance, or good feet, though one called the glides unremarkable.
Glide smoothness is consistently praised through PTFE feet, low-friction movement, easy movement on mats, and smooth movement without scratching.
Grip texture was a strength, with repeated praise for rubberized rests, textured rows, and tactile surfaces that help grip and orientation.
Grip texture is mixed. One review likes the matte smooth plastic, while another says it lacks added grip tape and does not use a soft-touch coating.
Handedness was a clear limitation because reviewers consistently described the mouse as right-handed only and unsuitable for left-handed use.
Handedness evidence shows the D3 is right-handed and ergonomic; the broader O3 sibling offers more symmetrical/both-hand appeal, not the D3 itself.
Left and right click quality was mostly positive, with light, solid, and smooth clicks, though one reviewer wanted a snappier and crisper feel.
Main click quality is generally positive, with consistent left/right clicks, robust main buttons, and quiet pleasant clicks mentioned.
Lift-off distance received generally positive or acceptable notes, including iCUE lift-height control and testing that found the behavior normal or impressive.
Lift-off distance is a supported software setting and can be adjusted in several reported configurations.
Long-session comfort was positive where discussed, with reviewers reporting comfortable long sessions or no hand aches during extended play.
Long-session comfort is one of the D3's strengths, with reviewers citing longer-session comfort, reduced fatigue, and top ergonomic comfort.
Macro support was a major strength, with reviewers describing custom macros, full keybinds, shortcut assignments, and MMO ability mapping.
Macro support is directly supported through the customizable base button, which one review says can execute macros.
Materials quality was mostly positive because reviewers liked the matte/soft-touch finish and premium materials, though some noted gloss or coating wear concerns.
Materials quality is generally favorable, with matte smooth plastic and exceptional quality language, though one reviewer describes a standard plastic feel rather than premium coating.
MMO gaming suitability was the product's clearest strength, with reviewers repeatedly describing it as excellent, easier, or highly recommended for MMO play.
MOBA gaming suitability was also strong, with reviewers connecting the macro keypad and responsive sensor to Dota, League-style, or general MOBA use.
Motion consistency was praised in technical testing, including no jitter, no angle snapping or skipping, and no concern about precision or consistency.
Motion consistency is mostly strong, with consistent inputs and responsiveness noted, but one review reports slightly fluctuating tracking consistency under certain conditions.
Onboard memory was supported by repeated mentions of three onboard profiles or storage for settings and hardware playback.
Profile support is clear, with three programmable profiles and settings that can be saved or used for different games.
Palm grip comfort was one of the strongest comfort themes, with reviewers repeatedly saying the mouse naturally favors or excels in palm grip.
Palm grip support is directly mentioned in one review's grip coverage and reinforced by the ergonomic comfort descriptions.
Polling-rate evidence was consistently positive, with reviewers citing up to 1,000Hz operation and responsive reporting for gaming.
Polling-rate support is a major feature, with 8,000 Hz wireless polling repeatedly mentioned; battery drain at 8K is the main caveat for buyers.
Portability evidence was narrow and centered on settings portability: onboard profiles let users take personal settings to another PC.
Portability evidence is limited. One reviewer sees travel plus Bluetooth as a possible use case, but the dock and extra connection reduce simplicity.
Premium feel was supported by repeated praise for premium build, sturdy construction, and comfortable or high-quality physical feel.
Premium feel is positive overall, driven by high-quality finish, distinctive dock/battery system, and enthusiast positioning, though price remains high.
Profile switching was supported by hardware profile buttons, iCUE profile controls, and reviewers noting different game or app profiles.
Profile switching and sensitivity switching are supported through software profiles, dock or mouse controls, and quick loading for different games or preferences.
Programmable-button coverage was very strong, with reviewers repeatedly citing 12 side buttons and 17 total programmable/customizable buttons.
Programmable button coverage is strong, with assignable mouse buttons, key binding, reprogrammable buttons, and dock-button customization.
RGB features were consistently described as customizable, with four lighting zones, profile/DPI indicators, and iCUE lighting controls.
RGB is supported and configurable, but reviews are mixed: it is discreet and feature-rich, while some reviewers dislike reduced RGB elements or blotchy/inaccurate colors.
Scroll wheel quality was mixed: reviewers praised tactility, texture, and smooth steps, while others called it average or reported middle-button failure over time.
Scroll-wheel feedback is mixed. Some reviewers praise its feel and defined steps, while others want lower resistance, more precision, or more tactile feedback.
The sensor was one of the mouse's strongest areas, with reviewers praising the PixArt sensor, upgraded sensor hardware, and responsive behavior.
Sensor performance is strong across reviews, with a 30K DPI BAMF sensor, high precision, accurate tracking, and responsive gaming performance.
Shape comfort was generally positive for the intended grip and hand sizes, though the wide, specialized body is not universally comfortable.
Shape comfort is mostly positive for the ergonomic D3, but one reviewer strongly disliked the cut-through gap in the palm area.
Side button quality was mixed: reviewers liked the tactile/textured design and responsiveness, but several found the buttons small, crowded, or easier to mis-hit.
Side-button quality is mostly positive for accessibility and comfort, though one reviewer wanted the D3 side buttons to be larger and easier to distinguish.
Skate durability had limited but useful evidence: one reviewer saw little wear after weeks, while a long-term owner noted the feet were worn but not through.
Software stability was mixed, with one reviewer calling iCUE stable while a long-term user described buggy behavior and crashes.
Software usability was sharply mixed: iCUE was praised as powerful and easy by some reviewers but criticized as clunky, unintuitive, or a hassle by others.
Software usability is a strength. Reviewers call Glorious Core cleaner, intuitive, simple, and useful for DPI, polling, lighting, profiles, and button controls.
Surface compatibility was supported by iCUE surface calibration and testing on different pad types, with reviewers noting calibration or successful hard/soft pad tracking.
Surface compatibility is positive, with smooth movement reported across mouse pads, desk mats, and a wide variety of desk surfaces.
Switch durability was supported mainly by the Omron 50-million-click rating and mentions of upgraded switches, rather than long-term lab durability testing.
Switch durability is strongly supported by the repeated 130-million-click optical-switch rating.
Switch feel was generally positive, with reviewers describing satisfying, distinct, clicky, or nice-feeling clicks.
Switch feel is mostly positive, with direct response, decent optical-switch quality, and quiet clicks in one review, though noise impressions vary.
Value depended on use case: reviewers found it worth the price for MMO/MOBA or macro-heavy use, but less compelling for buyers who will not use the side keypad.
Value is split. Several reviewers recommend the mouse or say it lives up to its price, while others emphasize that the battery system must matter to justify the high cost.
Weight was a common drawback: most reviewers described the mouse as heavy, bulky, or hefty, though one reviewer coming from a G502 found it a little light.
Weight is generally a strength. The D3 is repeatedly described around 69 g and lightweight, though one reviewer did not consider it incredibly light.
Weight tuning was a weakness because reviewers explicitly wished for adjustable weights or a degree of weight customization.
Wireless latency is rated highly in practical impressions, with no lag, no delay, and no detectable wired-versus-wireless responsiveness gap.
Wireless performance is a core strength, especially uninterrupted use and stable gaming, with minor caveats around battery runtime and isolated tracking consistency comments.