Best Wireless Mice for Work & Gaming
The best wireless mice for productivity, gaming, and ergonomic comfort in 2026. From the MX Master 4 to the Viper V4 Pro — tested and compared.
How We Picked
We evaluated wireless mice across sensor accuracy, weight, battery life, grip compatibility, and build quality. Every mouse on this list uses 2.4GHz wireless (not just Bluetooth) for latency-free performance. We included picks for productivity, gaming, and ergonomic use cases.
Our Top Picks
Razer Viper V4 Pro — Best for Gaming
49 grams, Focus Pro 50K Gen-3 sensor, 180-hour battery at 1000Hz, 8000Hz wireless polling. The most complete competitive FPS mouse available in 2026. Low-profile shape suits claw and fingertip grips.
Logitech MX Master 4
$$$The productivity mouse that defined the category — now with haptic scroll feedback and USB-C
- MagSpeed adaptive scroll
- 8K DPI sensor
- Multi-device (3 devices)
- USB-C + Bluetooth
Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
$$$Haptic Inductive Trigger System (HITS) for adjustable click actuation — a generational leap in click tech
- HITS adjustable clicks
- HERO 2 sensor
- ~60g wireless
- LIGHTSPEED 2.4GHz
Logitech Lift Vertical
$$57° vertical angle reduces forearm pronation — the best ergonomic wireless mouse for daily use
- 57° ergonomic angle
- Quiet clicks
- Small-to-medium hands
- Bluetooth + USB receiver
Glorious Model O3 Wireless
$$$BAMF 3.0 sensor, swappable InfinitePlay batteries, 8000Hz wireless — symmetric shape for both hands
- 66g with battery
- Swappable 200mAh packs
- 8000Hz wireless
- Ambidextrous shape
How to Choose
Grip style matters more than specs. Palm grip users need larger, heavier mice (MX Master 4, DeathAdder shape). Claw and fingertip grip users prefer lighter, flatter mice (Viper V4 Pro, Model O3). Ergonomic users with wrist pain should try a vertical mouse (Logitech Lift) before assuming they need a traditional shape.
For productivity, multi-device switching (Logitech Flow) lets you move your cursor across computers seamlessly. For gaming, weight and sensor consistency matter most — anything under 65 grams with a modern sensor will perform identically at the competitive level.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is wireless mouse latency a problem for gaming?
No. Modern 2.4GHz wireless mice at 1000Hz+ polling are indistinguishable from wired in blind tests. Bluetooth adds noticeable latency and should be avoided for competitive gaming, but 2.4GHz is fully performance-equivalent to wired.
What DPI should I use?
Most productivity users work at 800–1600 DPI. Competitive gamers typically use 400–1600 DPI with large mouse pads. Higher DPI numbers on spec sheets (25,000+) are marketing — virtually nobody uses settings that high.
How important is mouse weight for gaming?
Weight matters most for low-sensitivity FPS players who make wide arm movements. Under 60g is the competitive standard in 2026. For productivity and casual use, weight is a comfort preference, not a performance factor.