It's also a fraction heavier than the old Harpoon, now weighing 99g as opposed to 85g.
![corsair harpoon wireless corsair harpoon wireless](https://www.mm-vision.dk/image/0/0/mmv_corsair_harpoon_rgb_wireless_02.jpg)
You're probably never going to need that extra 4000 DPI in all honesty - not unless you've got bionic eyes that can somehow detect subatomic-level movements across the screen - but it never hurts to have the extra bit of flexibility. The main difference (apart from the fact it's wireless) is its new PMW3325 sensor, which bumps the original Harpoon's maximum speed of 6000 DPI all the way up to 10,000. The only difference is that the latter button now has a little RGB LED along the top of it to help you identify which of its five DPI / sensitivity settings you currently have enabled. It's got the same rubbery textured grip on either side of the mouse, plus an identical pair of programmable buttons along the right-handed sculpted thumb groove as well as a central DPI button.
#Corsair harpoon wireless cracked#
Is Corsair's new cordless competitor really all it's cracked up to be? Here's wot I think.īased on the regular version of Corsair's Harpoon RGB mouse, the new wireless model looks more or less exactly the same as its wired sibling. Now, I know I haven't reviewed that many wireless gaming mice so far, but the two I have looked at, namely the Logitech G Pro Wireless, and Razer's Mamba + FireFly Hyperflux combo, will both set you back at least a hundred quid, if not significantly more.
![corsair harpoon wireless corsair harpoon wireless](https://www.techpowerup.com/review/corsair-harpoon-rgb-wireless/images/harpoon_surface1.jpg)
A wireless gaming mouse for a mere $50? You must be having a laugh. When Corsair announced their new Harpoon RGB Wireless gaming mouse would cost just £49 / $50 back in January earlier this year, I thought there must be some kind of catch.