Review

Logitech G PRO X2 SUPERSTRIKE Wireless Mouse

Logitech's first haptic-click mouse swaps mechanical switches for an inductive trigger with adjustable force and rapid trigger reset — revolutionary tech at a price that only competitive players will justify.

4.4
out of 5 Great
Price $179.99

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Logitech G PRO X2 SUPERSTRIKE Wireless Mouse

What we like

  • Haptic Inductive Trigger System eliminates click switch wear entirely
  • 10-level actuation force and 5-level rapid trigger reset for per-game tuning
  • Hero 2 sensor with 44K DPI, 888 IPS, and true 8KHz polling
  • 61g weight feels effortless during long sessions
  • 60-90 hour battery life and POWERPLAY 2 wireless charging support

Could be better

  • $180 is a steep ask if you're not chasing competitive milliseconds
  • White-only at launch with no dark or ambidextrous variant
  • Haptic click feel takes a few days to adjust to coming from mechanical switches

Full Review

The G PRO X2 SUPERSTRIKE is the most significant change to a gaming mouse in years. Logitech ditched mechanical click switches entirely and replaced them with a Haptic Inductive Trigger System — an electromagnetic actuator that simulates a click through programmable haptic feedback. It’s a genuinely new way to click a mouse, and it works.

The Click Itself

The first hour with HITS feels strange. There’s no physical switch travel, just a firm tactile pulse the moment your actuation threshold is hit. By day three it feels normal, and by week one going back to a mechanical mouse feels mushy and slow. Logitech’s spec sheet claims 30ms faster click registration, and in fast-paced shooters the difference is perceptible.

The real value is customization. You get 10 actuation force levels and 5 rapid trigger reset settings, so you can dial in a feather-light hair trigger for Valorant or a firmer click for productivity work that prevents misfires. None of this is possible with mechanical switches.

Sensor and Build

The Hero 2 sensor is the same one in the Superlight 2, and it remains class-leading. 44,000 DPI is overkill, but 888 IPS tracking and 8KHz polling are the parts that actually matter for high-refresh gaming. At 61g the shape is identical to the Superlight 2 — a neutral, mostly ambidextrous hump that fits palm, claw, and fingertip grips equally well.

Battery life lands at 60 hours with 8KHz polling enabled, or up to 90 hours at 1KHz. POWERPLAY 2 compatibility means you can drop the cable entirely if you already own the mat.

The Razer Viper V4 Pro Question

The Viper V4 Pro is the obvious comparison and it’s $20 cheaper with optical switches that are also excellent. If you don’t care about rapid trigger or adjustable actuation, the Viper wins on value. The SUPERSTRIKE only justifies its premium if you’re going to actually tune the trigger settings per-game — otherwise you’re paying $180 for a feature you’ll never touch.

Who Should Buy This

Buy the G PRO X2 SUPERSTRIKE if you play competitive shooters seriously and want every millisecond advantage you can get, or if mechanical switch double-click failures have burned you before. Skip it if you’re a casual player or a productivity user — the Superlight 2 SE at less than half the price will serve you better. The tech is real and impressive, but the price tag is built for esports tryhards, not desk warriors.