Compare Razer Naga V2 HyperSpeed vs ASUS ROG Keris II Ace
The mouse is repeatedly described as supporting a 2.4GHz dongle or HyperSpeed wireless mode, with reviewers noting simple setup and useful wireless connectivity.
Reviews that discussed wireless modes consistently describe 2.4GHz connectivity as a core option alongside Bluetooth and wired use. The evidence supports strong coverage for 2.4GHz operation, including receiver storage, tri-mode connectivity, and pairing through the main wireless receiver.
Sensor acceleration specs were consistently described as high-end, with reviewers citing 50G acceleration alongside 750 IPS speed. The evidence supports strong acceleration capability, though it is presented as sensor performance rather than a separate user-facing tuning feature.
Tracking precision was repeatedly praised. Reviewers described near-perfect accuracy, high precision, accurate tracking, and jitter-free performance, with only one review noting high-DPI irregularity at extreme settings.
The remaining support is positive from one review, which says the mouse keeps its weight evenly distributed while sliding.
Most reviewers who discussed balance found the mouse light and well balanced. One teardown-style review noted a slightly forward balance point, but the broader evidence describes the mouse as comfortable to move without obvious front or rear weight bias.
Battery life is treated as a strength overall, with reviewers citing up to 250 hours over HyperSpeed and up to 400 hours over Bluetooth, though convenience depends on AA batteries.
Battery life is generally strong, with many reviews citing 107 hours at 2.4GHz with lighting off or strong real-world endurance. Higher polling rates and RGB reduce runtime, and one review measured lower Wi-Fi runtime with default lighting.
Bluetooth is confirmed as an available secondary wireless mode, with reviewers contrasting it against Razer's faster HyperSpeed connection and emphasizing its longer battery-life role.
Bluetooth support is widely confirmed and treated as a useful convenience feature. Reviews describe Bluetooth pairing, multi-device Bluetooth use, and longer battery life in Bluetooth mode, while noting that it is not the low-latency competitive mode.
Build quality trends positive, with reviewers praising Razer construction and premium feel, though plastic construction and feature omissions temper the impression.
Build quality is mostly positive, with reviewers describing a sturdy, solid shell and little flex or creaking. A few reviewers found the build merely average or noted minor rattle, so the evidence is strong but not flawless.
Button customization is one of the clearest recurring positives, with reviewers repeatedly noting that buttons can be customized, remapped, or assigned keybinds and commands.
Button customization is well supported through Armoury Crate or onboard controls. Reviewers cite remapping inputs, assigning commands, programmable controls, and hardware-based adjustments for key settings.
Button responsiveness is supported by reviewers who found the side buttons easy to press, easier or harder depending on placement, and clicky in a positive way.
Button responsiveness is consistently praised. Reviewers cite snappy registration, lightning-quick actuation, responsive clicks, and short-travel optical buttons that support fast inputs.
Cable flexibility is a strength overall. Several reviewers praised the paracord as flexible, tangle-free, or drag-reducing, though one reviewer found it long enough but somewhat stiff while charging.
Charging convenience is a drawback because reviewers emphasize the double-A battery design, lack of USB charging, and need to replace or recharge separate batteries.
Charging and setup convenience are mixed. One review says USB-C charging is quick and painless, while another liked the adapter/booster setup but noted the connection stack could feel loose.
Claw grip comfort is supported for many hand sizes. Reviews mention all-grip compatibility, relaxed claw comfort, and claw grip usefulness, though one detailed review cautions that fit depends on hand size.
Click latency is a clear strength. Reviews cite latency reduction from high polling, measured low click latency, no latency issues, and low wireless click latency measurements.
Click noise receives a middle score because one reviewer says it is neither especially quiet nor especially loud.
Click noise is mixed but generally acceptable. Some reviews described the switches as quiet or quieter than competitors, while another found the optical clicks loud.
Connection stability is described positively, with one reviewer saying the mouse stayed connected throughout a house and another showing quick Bluetooth setup.
Connection stability is strong across the reviews that tested it. Reviewers mention tri-mode connectivity, no delays, no hiccups, no dropouts, and stable Bluetooth or wireless switching.
Cross-device use is supported mainly through Bluetooth and multi-device pairing. Reviewers cite simultaneous pairing with multiple devices, multi-device setup versatility, and the ability to pair up to three devices.
Debounce customization is weak. The available evidence says debounce was 0ms and not adjustable, and another review states there was no debounce setting in the software.
DPI and sensitivity options are well supported, with reviews citing up to 30,000 DPI, tracking-speed adjustment, and multiple sensitivity stages in software.
The DPI range is one of the clearest strengths. Reviewers repeatedly cite 42,000 DPI or CPI and describe it as unusually high, although some note that most users will not need the upper end.
Durability over time is supported mainly through switch behavior. One review specifically links optical switches to consistent long-term performance and reduced double-click risk.
Ecosystem integration is present through Aura Sync and the ROG Omni receiver. Reviewers cite lighting sync with compatible devices and using one receiver for multiple ROG peripherals.
Ergonomics are generally strong for right-handed MMO or productivity use, especially palm-oriented holds, but some users may need to adapt their thumb placement around the side buttons.
The design is clearly ergonomic and right-handed. Reviews describe the curved or ergonomic shape, often tying it to right-handed comfort and ultra-light wireless use.
Fingertip grip comfort is limited and hand-size dependent. One review says the light weight makes fingertip use possible with grip tape, while another does not recommend fingertip gripping the ergonomic shell.
FPS suitability is only partly supported: one review says DOOM was easy enough, but the same review frames the macro keys as mostly nonsensical for that type of game.
FPS and esports suitability are consistently strong. Reviewers repeatedly frame the mouse around hard-core gameplay, competitive esports, FPS use, high polling, and precision aiming.
Glide smoothness is broadly praised. Reviewers cite PTFE feet, smooth glide, controlled movement, and good stock skates, including use on glass in some tests.
Grip support is mixed but useful, with one review praising the grainy texture and another warning that thumb placement can feel constrained on rougher surfaces.
Grip texture is the most divisive physical trait. Some reviewers liked the non-slip or textured surface and grip tape, while others found the coating slippery or not secure enough without aftermarket grips.
Handedness is a drawback in the remaining evidence because the mouse is identified as right-handed only.
Handedness is limited. Evidence shows the mouse is comfortable for right-handers but not suited for lefties or users wanting an ambidextrous shape.
Main click quality is mixed in the remaining evidence, with one reviewer comparing the clicks unfavorably to the MX Master.
Left and right click quality is generally strong, with snappy, tactile, consistent, or solid click feedback across many reviews. Some detailed reviewers still criticized slipperiness or travel on the main buttons.
Lift-off distance support is present through software or onboard controls, but not universally flexible. Reviews mention lift-off adjustment, low/high LOD options, and 1mm/2mm LOD limits.
Long-session comfort remains positive in one review, which says the mouse is good for long periods of use.
Long-session comfort is strong where discussed. Reviewers cite no hand pain, low fatigue, and zero strain over prolonged play, helped by the low weight.
Macro support is a major strength, with reviewers repeatedly connecting the 12-button grid and software customization to macros, commands, and MMO or productivity control.
Macro support is available through Armoury Crate. Reviews cite macro recording and saved macros in the software workflow.
Materials quality is mixed because the mouse is repeatedly described as plastic, with some reviewers still finding it grippy or acceptable and one comparing it less favorably to a higher-end productivity mouse.
Materials quality is generally positive, with evidence for PBT buttons, bio-based nylon, rigid shell feel, and textured surfaces. Some reviewers still found the shell feel less premium than rubberized coatings.
MMO suitability is the product’s clearest strength, with reviews consistently presenting it as an MMO mouse built around high button density and macro use.
MMO suitability is only lightly supported. One review used the mouse in Final Fantasy XIV raids and inventory management, but the review evidence does not present it as a dedicated MMO mouse.
Motion consistency is strong in gameplay, with reviewers citing smooth tracking, granular accuracy, and micro-adjustment precision. MotionSync is present but not configurable in one technical review.
Onboard memory/profile support is present, with reviews citing hardware-based profiles, onboard controls, and profile switching without needing to keep the software open.
Palm grip comfort is supported by reviewers who describe the mouse as palm-fitting and designed around a palm-oriented ergonomic hold.
Palm grip comfort is positive but not universal. Reviews describe comfortable palm or relaxed palm use, while hand size and the smaller ergonomic shape affect fit.
Polling rate support is supported by one review citing selectable 125, 500, or 1000Hz operation.
Polling rate is a headline strength across nearly every review. Evidence repeatedly confirms 4,000Hz wireless polling and 8,000Hz wired polling through the included booster.
Portability is supported by the included pouch, onboard dongle storage, and the idea that the same mouse setup can be used while traveling.
Portability is supported through bundled accessories, dongle storage, and multi-device use. Reviewers mention grip tape, extra feet, and using one mouse across multiple devices or on the go.
Premium feel is mixed-positive: some reviewers say it looks or feels premium, while the plastic build and AA battery design limit the luxury impression.
Premium feel is present but not unanimous. Some reviewers found the chassis premium and the mouse solid, while others criticized coating and click feel as less premium for the price.
Profile or sensitivity-stage switching is supported by one review through software sensitivity stages and mouse-wheel remapping.
Profile switching is supported but placement is sometimes criticized. Reviewers cite scenario profiles, saved profiles, and button-combination profile switching, while some dislike the underside DPI/profile control.
Programmable button density is a defining strength, with reviewers consistently citing 12 side buttons or many programmable buttons overall.
Programmable button coverage is solid for an esports mouse. Reviews cite five or six programmable buttons and programmable controls including scroll functions.
RGB is mostly a limitation in the remaining supported reviews, which state that this HyperSpeed version has no RGB lighting.
RGB features are modest but useful. Reviews focus on the single scroll-wheel RGB zone, customization, battery notifications, and keeping RGB without losing the low weight.
Scroll wheel quality is a recurring positive thanks to tilt inputs, tactile and free-spin modes, and easy customization across multiple reviews.
Scroll wheel quality is mixed. Some reviewers praised tactile, quiet, or excellent scrolling, while others wanted clearer steps, adjustable resistance, or a more controlled encoder.
Sensor performance is supported by references to the Focus Pro 30K optical sensor in multiple reviews.
Sensor performance is excellent overall. Reviewers cite an accurate high-end sensor, no tracking issue, top-tier performance, glass tracking, and no spinouts or jitter in normal testing.
Shape comfort is generally best for palm-oriented use, though one productivity-focused review says the thumb grid can restrict grip freedom.
Shape comfort is a major strength for many reviewers, especially for relaxed claw, palm, and small-to-medium ergonomic preferences. A few reviewers reported hand-size mismatch or cramps.
Side button quality is broadly positive for MMO use, with reviewers noting easy reach, shaped or tactile reference points, and clicky buttons, though accidental presses and learning curve are concerns.
Side button quality is mixed. Some reviewers loved their placement and crispness, while others found them small, stiff, high, heavy, or less accessible for larger hands.
Skate durability is only moderately supported. One review points to replaceable feet if they wear out, and another describes the stock skates as standard PTFE rather than emphasizing long-term durability.
Software stability is only directly covered by one review, which says Synapse has improved and is no longer an over-encumbered mess.
Software stability is a weakness. Reviews describe Armoury Crate as bloated, resource-heavy, and unwieldy, even though some settings can be handled without keeping it open.
Software usability is mostly positive for remapping and keybinds, but one reviewer finds macro sequence options limited compared with a Stream Deck.
Software usability is mixed. Some reviewers found configuration simple or the lighter Armoury Crate Gear easier, while others called the software slow, terrible, bloated, or in need of improvement.
Surface compatibility is mixed in the remaining evidence because one reviewer says rougher surfaces can force awkward thumb placement or accidental presses.
Surface compatibility is very strong. Reviews describe calibration for surfaces, tracking on glass, and reliable tracking across many surfaces or mouse pads.
Switch durability is a clear strength. Multiple reviews cite the ROG Optical Micro Switches and their 100-million-click rating.
Switch feel is positive overall, with reviewers describing mechanical switches, tactile feel, and better-feeling clicks than cheaper third-party mice.
Switch feel is divisive. Some reviewers praised crisp, consistent, punchy switches, while others described dull, mushy, hollow, or travel-heavy click feel.
Value is mixed: reviewers like the MMO-focused feature set and Razer build quality, but several also call out the high price or cheaper mice with more features.
Value is mixed because the performance is high but the price is premium. Several reviewers called it expensive or pricey, while others still found the package justified or worth the money.
Weight is a notable drawback in the remaining evidence, with one review describing the mouse as not light.
Weight is a standout strength. Reviewers repeatedly cite 54g or about 1.9 ounces and praise the control and low fatigue that come from the ultra-light build.
Wireless latency is supported by one reviewer who says HyperSpeed feels practically wired with no noticeable lag.
Wireless latency is strong in the 2.4GHz mode. Reviewers cite low-latency wireless, low measured wireless click latency, high-polling responsiveness, and no obvious latency problems.
Wireless performance is positive in the remaining evidence, with reviewers noting strong connectivity and practically no perceived lag in HyperSpeed mode.
Wireless performance is consistently strong. Reviewers report good wireless connectivity, no drop in tracking, no hiccups, no stutters, and no dropouts during use.