
Corsair Gaming Mice 🖱️
Corsair Gaming Mice — FPS, MMO & Wireless (2)
How to Choose a Corsair Mouse
The right Corsair mouse depends mostly on what you play and whether you want wired or wireless. FPS players want light weight and a simple button layout; MMO and MOBA players want a wall of programmable side buttons. The guide below covers the decisions that matter before you buy.
For FPS and fast-aim games, look at the lighter M65 or Sabre shapes with a clean two-to-three button layout. For MMO, MOBA or productivity, the Scimitar and Darkstar lines add a large grid of programmable side buttons for spells, abilities and macros. Match the button count to how many commands you actually bind.
Wired Corsair mice are the lightest and never need charging. Wireless models use a low-latency 2.4GHz connection that feels effectively the same as wired for almost all players, plus many add Bluetooth for laptops and travel. Choose wireless for a clean desk; choose wired for minimum weight at a given price.
A standard mouse has two side buttons — fine for back/forward and a push-to-talk. MMO players running dozens of abilities benefit from the Scimitar-style 12-button grid, which puts an action bar under your thumb. Don't pay for buttons you won't bind, but if you play MMO seriously, the extra keys are genuinely useful.
Corsair iCUE lets you remap buttons, build macros, set DPI stages and sync RGB lighting, and it saves profiles to onboard memory so settings travel with the mouse. If you own other Corsair gear, iCUE ties keyboard, mouse, cooler and case lighting into one scene. It's the main reason to stay within the Corsair ecosystem.
Lighter mice are easier to flick and lift for fast aim, which is why FPS-focused models keep weight down. Some Corsair mice (the M65 line in particular) add adjustable weights so you can dial in a heavier, more planted feel if you prefer it. Tune to what feels controlled for your genre rather than chasing the lowest number.

