A wireless gaming mouse is judged first on its sensor and latency, then on how it sits in your hand. We scored seven of the best, all real and available in 2026. Our pick is the Razer Viper V3 Pro, with an SR Score of 92, the safest pro-validated FPS choice. The Logitech G Pro X Superlight 2 (90) is the runner-up. To save money, the Glorious Model O 2 Wireless is the pick.
The ranking
| Rank | Mouse | Best for | Weight / price | SR Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Razer Viper V3 Pro | Best overall FPS | 54g / $159.99 | 92 |
| 2 | Logitech G Pro X Superlight 2 | Lightest flagship | 60g / ~$159 | 90 |
| 3 | Glorious Model O 2 Wireless | Best value | 68g / ~$85 | 88 |
| 4 | Razer DeathAdder V3 Pro | Ergonomic shape | 63g / $149.99 | 89 |
| 5 | Corsair Sabre RGB Pro Wireless | Long battery | 79g / ~$109.99 | 84 |
| 6 | Logitech G502 X Plus | Feature-rich | 106g / ~$159 | 83 |
| 7 | Razer Basilisk V3 Pro | MMO/productivity | 112g / ~$159 | 85 |
Methodology
The Gear Score v2026 rubric weights five criteria:
- Sensor & latency (30) — tracking accuracy and wireless lag.
- Weight & shape (25) — how light and how well-shaped it is.
- Value for money (20) — performance per dollar.
- Battery & build (15) — runtime and durability.
- Reputation & reviews (10) — tester and player consensus.
Sensor and latency lead because that is the point of a gaming mouse. Re-weight toward value and the Glorious climbs.
Razer Viper V3 Pro
Razer’s flagship esports mouse, $159.99 list (often ~$129.99 on sale). A 54g symmetrical body with a Focus Pro sensor and sub-1ms HyperSpeed wireless. Slightly lighter than the Superlight 2.
| Criterion | Score |
|---|---|
| Sensor & latency | 30/30 |
| Weight & shape | 24/25 |
| Value for money | 16/20 |
| Battery & build | 14/15 |
| Reputation & reviews | 8/10 |
Trade-off: it is expensive and has no Bluetooth.
Logitech G Pro X Superlight 2
Logitech’s flagship, ~$159, a 60g body with the HERO 2 sensor (up to 32,000 DPI) and zero-latency LIGHTSPEED wireless. The longtime competitive standard.
| Criterion | Score |
|---|---|
| Sensor & latency | 29/30 |
| Weight & shape | 24/25 |
| Value for money | 16/20 |
| Battery & build | 13/15 |
| Reputation & reviews | 8/10 |
Trade-off: minimal extra buttons and the same high price as the Viper.
Glorious Model O 2 Wireless
Glorious’ value flagship, ~$85, a 68g shape with the BAMF 2.0 sensor and around 110 hours of battery. Flagship feel for far less.
| Criterion | Score |
|---|---|
| Sensor & latency | 27/30 |
| Weight & shape | 22/25 |
| Value for money | 20/20 |
| Battery & build | 12/15 |
| Reputation & reviews | 7/10 |
Trade-off: build quality is a notch below the top two.
Razer DeathAdder V3 Pro
Razer’s ergonomic flagship, $149.99, a 63g right-handed shape with the Focus Pro sensor and up to 90 hours of battery. The best ergo pick.
| Criterion | Score |
|---|---|
| Sensor & latency | 29/30 |
| Weight & shape | 23/25 |
| Value for money | 16/20 |
| Battery & build | 14/15 |
| Reputation & reviews | 8/10 |
Trade-off: the ergonomic shape suits right-handers only.
Corsair Sabre RGB Pro Wireless
Corsair’s lightweight wireless mouse, ~$109.99, a 79g body with SLIPSTREAM wireless, 2,000Hz polling, and up to 90 hours of battery.
| Criterion | Score |
|---|---|
| Sensor & latency | 25/30 |
| Weight & shape | 21/25 |
| Value for money | 16/20 |
| Battery & build | 13/15 |
| Reputation & reviews | 7/10 |
Trade-off: heavier than the elite esports picks.
Logitech G502 X Plus
Logitech’s feature mouse, ~$159, a 106g body with 13 controls and RGB. The pick if you want buttons over featherweight.
| Criterion | Score |
|---|---|
| Sensor & latency | 26/30 |
| Weight & shape | 17/25 |
| Value for money | 15/20 |
| Battery & build | 13/15 |
| Reputation & reviews | 8/10 |
Trade-off: it is heavy by 2026 standards.
Razer Basilisk V3 Pro
Razer’s MMO/productivity mouse, ~$159, a 112g body with 11 controls and a notched scroll wheel. Great beyond FPS.
| Criterion | Score |
|---|---|
| Sensor & latency | 26/30 |
| Weight & shape | 16/25 |
| Value for money | 15/20 |
| Battery & build | 13/15 |
| Reputation & reviews | 8/10 |
Trade-off: too heavy for competitive FPS.
How to choose
For competitive FPS, the Viper V3 Pro or Superlight 2, decided by hand fit. For value, the Glorious Model O 2 Wireless. The DeathAdder V3 Pro is the ergonomic pick, the Sabre the battery option, and the G502 X Plus and Basilisk V3 Pro suit players who want extra buttons. Re-weight toward value and the Glorious wins; weight sensor and latency, as we do, and the Viper V3 Pro takes it.
Verification
- Razer Viper V3 Pro — pricing and specs verified on razer.com / rtings.com.
- Logitech G Pro X Superlight 2 — pricing and specs verified on logitechg.com / rtings.com.
- Glorious Model O 2 Wireless — pricing and specs verified on gloriousgaming.com.
- Razer DeathAdder V3 Pro — pricing and specs verified on razer.com.
- Corsair Sabre RGB Pro Wireless — pricing and specs verified on corsair.com.
- Logitech G502 X Plus — pricing and specs verified on logitechg.com.
- Razer Basilisk V3 Pro — pricing and specs verified on razer.com.
Related rankings
- Best Gaming Mice 2026: 7 Mice Scored
- Best Gaming Headsets 2026: 7 Headsets Scored
- Best Gaming Keyboards 2026: 7 Boards Scored
- Best Racing Wheels 2026: 6 Wheels Scored
Frequently asked questions
- What is the best wireless gaming mouse in 2026?
- The Razer Viper V3 Pro. It is the safest pro-validated FPS pick, lighter than the Logitech Superlight 2, with sub-1ms latency and excellent build quality. It lists at $159.99 and frequently sells near $129.99.
- What is the best value wireless gaming mouse?
- The Glorious Model O 2 Wireless at around $85, with a 68g body, BAMF 2.0 sensor, and roughly 110 hours of battery. It delivers flagship feel for far less.
- Razer Viper V3 Pro or Logitech G Pro X Superlight 2?
- Both are elite. The Viper V3 Pro is lighter with slightly better build and mouse feet; the Superlight 2 has the proven HERO 2 sensor and a 60g body. Pick by which shape fits your hand.
- Is wireless as good as wired for gaming?
- Yes, at this tier. All the flagships here match wired latency at under 1ms, so the cable is no longer a performance compromise.