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Logitech G PRO X2 Superstrike Review: The Click, Reinvented

★★★★½ 4.5/5

Reviewed 2026-06-17

The first genuinely new idea in gaming mice in years: inductive analog main switches you can tune like a Hall-effect keyboard — adjustable actuation, rapid trigger on the clicks, and a haptic 'feel' you dial in. It's a superb 61 g flagship; just know the edge is feel and consistency, not a win-rate you can measure.

Best for: Players who want the most tunable click on the market on a proven Pro-X shape — and don't mind paying flagship-plus for refinement.

The good

  • +Inductive ANALOG main switches: set the click actuation point, or turn on rapid trigger for faster re-clicks — the keyboard Hall-effect idea, finally on the buttons
  • +Adjustable click HAPTICS — the tactile 'feel' of the click is generated and tunable to taste, and stays consistent as the mouse wears
  • +61 g, HERO 2, 8K-capable, LIGHTSPEED, 60–90 hr battery — clears the competitive floor on every spec
  • +The familiar, well-documented Pro X2 shape (medium ambidextrous)

The catch

  • $179.99 — a flagship-plus price, and the box skimps (no spare feet)
  • No on-mouse DPI button — you have to bind it (a step back from older Pro X mice)
  • Early-run quality-control reports — worth buying from somewhere with easy returns
  • The analog/haptic magic is feel & click-consistency, NOT a measurable aim advantage (PD013); featherweight chasers can get lighter (49–54 g) for less

Specs

SpecLogitech G Pro X2 Superstrike
Weight60.8 g
Shapeambidextrous
Max polling8KHz
SensorHERO 2 (flawless)
Connectivitywireless
Battery90 hr @ 1000 Hz
Price classFlagship

Gaming mice have been refined to the gram for years, but the actual click hadn't really changed — a mechanical switch fires at one fixed point, with one fixed feel, that drifts as it wears. The Logitech G PRO X2 Superstrike changes that. Its main buttons use an inductive analog sensor — the same idea that took over competitive keyboards as Hall-effect — so the click becomes adjustable rather than fixed.

What "Superstrike" actually does

Three things the old switch couldn't. Adjustable actuation: set how far you press before the click registers — light hair-trigger or a deliberate deeper press. Rapid trigger on the clicks: the button re-arms the instant you release, so rapid re-fires (tap-shooting, spam-clicking) register faster and more consistently. And tunable haptics: the tactile "bump" you feel is generated by an actuator, so you dial the click feel to taste — and it stays identical click one to click one-million, instead of going mushy with age.

What you're actually buying

As a base mouse it's a known quantity: 61 g, HERO 2 sensor, 8K-capable, LIGHTSPEED wireless, long battery — it clears the competitive floor on every axis, like every flagship here does. The Superstrike switch is a real innovation and genuinely improves click feel and re-fire consistency — but be honest about the ceiling: no study converts a nicer, faster-resetting click into a higher win-rate. It's the best click on the market; it is not a wallhack. Buy it because you'll love tuning the feel, not because it'll rank you up.

Cross-shopping the other flagship ergo/ambi? See Superstrike vs DeathAdder V4 Pro. Want the lightest possible instead? The 49–54 g featherweights (Viper V4 Pro, OP1 8K) give up the analog click but save weight and money.

Check Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike price

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The rating is an editorial product verdict (build, value, fit, how well it clears the competitive floor) — not a win-rate claim. Specs are sourced; the buy link is an affiliate link to your regional store, where the live price shows.

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