These two mice represent the peak of wireless competitive gaming hardware. Logitech's G Pro X Superlight 2 weighs a ludicrous 60g and uses the HERO 2 sensor that Rtings.com calls flawless. Razer's DeathAdder V3 Pro is 64g with an ergonomic right-hand shell and HyperSpeed wireless. For pro-level FPS play, sensor differences are imperceptible — ergonomics and weight become the real differentiators.
Logitech G Pro X Superlight 2
G Pro X Superlight 2 wins for competitive ambidextrous use; DeathAdder V3 Pro wins for right-handed players who want superior ergonomics.
Specs Comparison
| Spec | Razer DeathAdder V3 Pro | Logitech G Pro X Superlight 2 |
|---|---|---|
| Weight | 64g | 60g |
| Sensor | Focus Pro 30K | HERO 2 |
| Max DPI | 30,000 | 32,000 |
| Polling Rate | Up to 8000 Hz | Up to 2000 Hz (4K/8K add-on) |
| Battery Life | ~90 hours | ~95 hours |
| Connectivity | HyperSpeed 2.4 GHz | LIGHTSPEED 2.4 GHz |
| Shape | Ergonomic right-hand | Ambidextrous |
| Price | ~$149 | ~$159 |
Sensor Performance
Both mice are essentially perfect on sensor metrics. Logitech's HERO 2 sensor and Razer's Focus Pro 30K sensor have zero spinout, no acceleration, and sub-microsecond click latency in independent testing by Rtings.com and MouseReview. At this level of competition, sensor differences won't impact your aim.
Both support polling rates up to 8000 Hz (with optional software/adapter). At standard 1000 Hz polling, click latency is imperceptible between the two. 8000 Hz is a niche use case that most players won't notice.
The real-world performance difference between these two sensors is zero. Don't buy either based on sensor specs alone.
Ergonomics and Shape
DeathAdder V3 Pro has one of the best ergonomic right-hand shells in the business. The pronounced hump provides excellent palm-grip support, and Razer has refined the shape over multiple generations. For right-hand claw and palm grippers, it's among the most comfortable mice available.
G Pro X Superlight 2 is symmetrical for ambidextrous use. It's flatter and more suited to fingertip or claw grip. The lack of side flares means it's less supportive for palm grip but easier to manipulate at low sensitivities.
Both mice are right-handed in practice for competitive use — the Superlight 2's ambidextrous design is a plus, but the absence of an ergonomic hump means right-hand palm grippers will prefer the DeathAdder.
Weight and Battery
G Pro X Superlight 2 at 60g is one of the lightest wireless mice available. DeathAdder V3 Pro at 64g is close — both are substantially lighter than previous-gen wireless mice. At 4g difference, most players won't notice without a direct comparison.
Battery life: DeathAdder V3 Pro advertises 90 hours; Superlight 2 claims 95 hours at standard polling. Both will last multiple gaming sessions between charges.
Logitech's LIGHTSPEED wireless is marginally lower latency than Razer's HyperSpeed in controlled lab tests, though both are functionally indistinguishable from wired in gameplay.
Razer DeathAdder V3 Pro Strengths
- Exceptional ergonomic right-hand shape for palm and claw grip
- HyperSpeed wireless with 90-hour battery life
- Focus Pro 30K sensor — flawless in all independent testing
- 4-zone Chroma RGB if aesthetics matter
Logitech G Pro X Superlight 2 Strengths
- 60g — one of the lightest wireless gaming mice available
- Ambidextrous design works for left-handed players
- HERO 2 sensor has the edge in consistency testing by Rtings
- LIGHTSPEED wireless: marginally lower latency than HyperSpeed
Razer DeathAdder V3 Pro Weaknesses
- Right-hand only — left-handed players need to look elsewhere
- 64g is excellent but Superlight 2 is 4g lighter
- Side buttons placement is awkward for smaller hands
Logitech G Pro X Superlight 2 Weaknesses
- Flat ambidextrous shape lacks DeathAdder's ergonomic palm support
- $160 price tag — premium even in this tier
- Minimal RGB — the spartan aesthetic isn't for everyone
Best For
- a: Right-handed palm and claw grip players who prioritize ergonomics in FPS gaming
- b: Competitive fingertip/claw grip players and left-handers who want the lightest wireless mouse
FAQ
Does polling rate above 1000 Hz actually matter in games?
In controlled tests, 4000–8000 Hz shows marginally smoother cursor movement, but competitive improvement is debated. Most pros use 1000 Hz.
Can I use DeathAdder V3 Pro on any surface?
Yes — it works on most surfaces. A dedicated mouse pad improves consistency with any optical sensor.
Is Logitech LIGHTSPEED better than Razer HyperSpeed?
Both are sub-1ms wireless solutions. In blind tests, players can't distinguish them. LIGHTSPEED has slightly lower measured latency in lab tests.