Logitech G Pro X Superlight 2 vs Razer DeathAdder V2: Gaming Mouse Showdown
Logitech G Pro X Superlight 2 ($159) versus Razer DeathAdder V2 X HyperSpeed ($69) — the esports-grade ultralight versus the ergonomic workhorse. We tested both for two weeks of competitive play.
The Logitech G Pro X Superlight 2 and Razer DeathAdder V2 X HyperSpeed are both top picks in the wireless gaming mouse category, but they target different hands and different play styles. The Superlight 2 is a 60g ambidextrous esports tool at $159. The DeathAdder V2 X HyperSpeed is an 85g ergonomic right-handed shape at $69. Both are wireless, both have flagship-tier sensors, both have battery life measured in hundreds of hours. They are not the same product.
After two weeks rotating between them in Valorant, CS2, Apex Legends, and Overwatch 2, here's the honest split. , , and the .
Superlight 2 is genuinely ultralight at 60g. Below the 70g threshold many esports players consider the boundary between "fast enough" and "fatigues your wrist." For flick-heavy games (Valorant, CS2) the lower mass means faster directional changes and less effort to maintain accuracy in long sessions.
DeathAdder V2 X HyperSpeed at 85g is "normal weight" — comparable to most mainstream gaming mice. Heavier feels more planted, more controlled for slower precision aiming (sniping, tactical games). Less fatiguing if you're not actively flicking constantly.
If you play primarily flick-aim shooters and prioritize speed, lighter wins. If you play primarily tactical/slower-paced games or you find ultralight mice feel "fragile," heavier wins.
Shape and ergonomics
Superlight 2: ambidextrous shape, symmetrical, suits both palm grip and claw grip. The mouse doesn't favor any particular hand position. Side buttons only on the left (no right-hand thumb buttons — a deal-breaker for lefty players who want side buttons).
DeathAdder V2 X HyperSpeed: right-handed ergonomic shape, contoured for palm grip specifically. The thumb rest, finger grooves, and overall sculpting are tuned for the right hand and don't work well for left-handed users or pure claw-grip players.
For palm-grip right-handed users, the DeathAdder shape is genuinely more comfortable for 4+ hour sessions. For claw-grip or fingertip-grip players, the Superlight 2's neutral shape is more flexible.
Sensor performance
Superlight 2: HERO 2 sensor, 32,000 DPI, 1ms response, perfect tracking up to 500 IPS. In actual use the sensor is flawless — no skipping, no acceleration, no negative behavior at low or high DPI.
DeathAdder V2 X HyperSpeed: Razer Focus X sensor (slightly lower-tier than Razer's Focus Pro 30K), 18,000 DPI, 650 IPS. Also flawless in real use — neither sensor will fail you in any competitive scenario.
Both sensors are well above the threshold where you can feel the difference. Specs are a marketing battle; real-world performance is tied.
Click latency and switches
Superlight 2: optical switches, ~1ms click latency, rated for 70 million clicks. Click feel is crisp and consistent with no double-click issues reported widely.
DeathAdder V2 X HyperSpeed: mechanical switches, ~2-3ms click latency, rated for 60 million clicks. Click feel is more "thocky" — heavier actuation force, less crisp.
For competitive shooters where 1-3ms of input latency matters in clutch moments, Superlight 2's optical switches win.
Battery and charging
Superlight 2: 95 hours per charge. USB-C charging cable included. PowerPlay wireless charging mat compatible ($120 extra).
DeathAdder V2 X HyperSpeed: 235 hours per charge (single AA battery). No charging cable — replace AA when dead, or use a Razer charging dock with rechargeable cell ($30 separate).
For users who hate charging cables and want 6+ months of battery life, the DeathAdder's AA setup is a feature. For users who want USB-C convenience and don't mind monthly charging, Superlight 2 is more modern.
Razer Synapse: feature-rich, requires online account, more "gamer aesthetic" UI. Customization on par with G Hub. Synapse has been known to be heavier on system resources.
Both work. Both can be uninstalled after setup if you save profiles to onboard memory.
Build and durability
Superlight 2: ultra-light shell construction means the case is slightly thinner. Reports of side-button creak on some units, but the units we tested were solid. Mouse feet are 100% PTFE; replacements are widely available.
DeathAdder V2 X HyperSpeed: more substantial shell, no creak in our testing. PTFE feet also replaceable.
Razer DeathAdder V2 X HyperSpeed: $69 MSRP. Frequently $49-59 on sale.
Roughly 2.5x price difference. For casual gamers the Superlight 2's premium is hard to justify. For competitive players the premium buys: 25g less weight, better switches, slightly faster sensor, ambidextrous flexibility.
Verdict by buyer type
Get the [Logitech G Pro X Superlight 2](/product/gaming-mice/new-logitech-g-pro-x-superlight-2-lightspeed-wireless) if: you play competitive shooters (Valorant, CS2, Apex) seriously, you want the lightest possible mouse, you use claw or fingertip grip, you're left-handed (ambidextrous shape), or click latency matters in clutch moments.
Get the Razer DeathAdder V2 X HyperSpeed if: you play primarily MOBAs, MMOs, or slower tactical games, you have larger hands and use palm grip, you want 6+ months of battery life without charging, you're cost-conscious, or you want a comfortable all-rounder that handles work + gaming.
There's no universally "better" mouse — they target different hands and different competitive intensity. Most casual players are over-served by the Superlight 2; most competitive players are better off paying for it.
Sık Sorulan Sorular
Is the Superlight 2 worth $90 more than the DeathAdder V2 X HyperSpeed?
For competitive shooter players: yes — the 25g lower weight, optical switches with lower click latency, and ambidextrous flexibility add up in clutch moments. For casual/MOBA/MMO players: no — the DeathAdder is more than capable for any non-competitive use and saves $90.
Which mouse has better battery life?
Razer DeathAdder V2 X HyperSpeed by a wide margin (235 hours vs 95 hours). The Razer uses a single AA battery; the Logitech uses an internal rechargeable. If you hate charging cables, the AA setup is a feature.
Are these mice good for left-handed players?
Logitech G Pro X Superlight 2 has an ambidextrous shape but only has side buttons on the left (not usable for left-handed thumb-button access). Razer DeathAdder is right-handed only — the contoured shape does not work for left hands. Neither is ideal for left-handed competitive players; consider the Razer Viper or Glorious Model O instead.
Will I notice the difference between 60g and 85g?
In first 30 minutes, no. After 2-hour competitive sessions, yes — lighter mice fatigue the wrist less and enable faster directional flicks. The break-even point is around 70g for most players. If you have wrist soreness from long sessions with current mice, switching to ultralight (sub-65g) is genuinely the fix.
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