
SteelSeries Gaming Mouse 🖱️
SteelSeries Gaming Mice — Aerox, Rival & Prime (19)
How to Choose a SteelSeries Mouse
The right SteelSeries mouse comes down to your grip, your games and whether you want wired or wireless. Lightweight Aerox models suit fast aim and claw grips; the fuller Rival and Prime shapes suit palm grips and longer sessions. The guide below covers the decisions that matter before you buy.
Aerox models are the lightweight, often wireless option built for fast flick aim and claw/fingertip grips. Rival shapes have a fuller, more pronounced ergonomic curve that suits palm grips and right-handed users. Prime is the stripped-back esports shape designed with pros. Pick by how you hold a mouse, not just by spec.
Wired SteelSeries mice are the lightest and never need charging, which is why many competitive players still use them. Wireless Aerox models add fast-charging and low-latency connections so you lose the cable drag without meaningful input lag. If you travel or hate cable management, go wireless; if you want absolute minimum weight for the price, wired wins.
Lighter mice are easier to flick and lift, which helps in fast aim games — that's the whole point of the Aerox line. A heavier mouse can feel more planted for slower, tracking-heavy play. There's no universally "best" weight; choose what feels controlled in your hand and for your genre.
SteelSeries GG (formerly Engine) lets you set DPI stages, remap buttons, build macros and adjust lighting, then save profiles to the mouse. Most competitive players run a lower DPI (commonly 400–1600) and let in-game sensitivity do the rest. Set two DPI stages so you can drop sensitivity for sniping on the fly.
SteelSeries mice use TrueMove optical sensors tuned for one-to-one tracking without smoothing or acceleration, which is what you want for consistent aim. For practical purposes any current SteelSeries gaming sensor tracks accurately on a decent cloth pad. A quality mousepad matters more for consistency than chasing the highest DPI number.





