
ROCCAT Gaming Mice 🖱️
ROCCAT Gaming Mice — Owl-Eye Sensors & Titan Switches (1)
How to Choose a ROCCAT Mouse
The right ROCCAT mouse comes down to shape, weight and how you grip — not just the sensor, since the whole range tracks accurately. Decide between the ergonomic Kone feel and the lighter Burst before you compare features. The guide below covers the decisions that actually change how a mouse plays.
The Kone series has a fuller ergonomic shape with more buttons and on-board profiles, suiting palm grips and players who want extra controls. The Burst series is lighter and more symmetrical for fast flicks and claw or fingertip grips. Pick the shape that matches your hand size and how you hold the mouse first.
Wired ROCCAT mice are lighter and need no charging, which suits competitive FPS players. Wireless models add a low-latency 2.4GHz connection and tidy your desk, at a slightly higher price and weight. For most gamers either is fine — choose wired for the lowest weight, wireless for cable-free convenience.
Most players game between 400 and 1600 DPI regardless of a mouse's maximum, so headline DPI numbers rarely decide a purchase. A 1000Hz polling rate gives responsive 1ms reporting that's ample for fast games. Match in-game sensitivity to your DPI rather than chasing the highest number.
ROCCAT's Titan switches are rated for a long click life and reduce accidental double-clicks. On-board memory stores your DPI steps and button remaps directly on the mouse, so your settings travel between PCs without reinstalling software. This matters if you play on more than one machine.
ROCCAT's Swarm software handles DPI stages, button macros and AIMO RGB, which animates lighting in response to use. If you run other ROCCAT or Turtle Beach gear, you can sync the lighting across your setup. The software is Windows-based; the mouse still works plug-and-play without it.
