Sculpted by victory. Made for the spotlight. The M75 WIRELESS sports an expertly designed ambidextrous mouse shape, enabling right- and left-handed players to take on the best competition with swagger and style. Weighing just 89g, the M75 WIRELESS is light and fast for the quickest mouse movements, and connects via near-zero lag SLIPSTREAM WIRELESS and Bluetooth. The mouse’s 26K DPI CORSAIR MARKSMAN optical sensor tracks movements with extreme precision, and shots register instantly on optical switches, guaranteed for 100 million clicks. Light up the leaderboard with uniquely styled two-zone RGB, customized in CORSAIR iCUE software. Grasp the M75 and win with flair
Q: What is the weight of the mouse?
A: The product weight of the M75 Wireless Mouse is 89 grams.
Q: Can the mouse be used with both right and left hands?
A: This mouse has an ambidextrous design, enabling both right and left-handed use.
Q: How does the mouse connect wirelessly?
A: The M75 Wireless mouse connects using near-zero lag SLIPSTREAM WIRELESS and Bluetooth®.
Q: What is the maximum DPI of the mouse sensor?
A: The maximum sensitivity of the mouse sensor is 26,000 dots per inch.
Q: What software is required to customize the RGB lighting?
A: CORSAIR iCUE software.
Q: Are the mouse buttons rated for a certain number of clicks?
A: The optical switches on the M75 Wireless Lightweight RGB Gaming Mouse are guaranteed for 100 million clicks.
Q: What are the dimensions of the mouse?
A: The Corsair M75 Wireless gaming mouse has a product width of 2.56 inches, a product length of 5.04 inches, and a product height of 1.64 inches.
Q: Approximately how long does last between charges with RGB on?
A: To be honest what feels like forever. For the final shape release we ran a 20+ hour session and I hadn’t charged my house for a few days prior. Still haven’t had to charge it yet! And yes this is with rgb on.
Sculpted by victory. Made for the spotlight. The M75 WIRELESS sports an expertly designed ambidextrous mouse shape, enabling right- and left-handed players to take on the best competition with swagger and style. Weighing just 89g, the M75 WIRELESS is light and fast for the quickest mouse movements, and connects via near-zero lag SLIPSTREAM WIRELESS and Bluetooth. The mouse’s 26K DPI CORSAIR MARKSMAN optical sensor tracks movements with extreme precision, and shots register instantly on optical switches, guaranteed for 100 million clicks. Light up the leaderboard with uniquely styled two-zone RGB, customized in CORSAIR iCUE software. Grasp the M75 and win with flair
Defined in ambition. Built through rigor. M75 AIR was made for a single purpose – to help you win. The symmetrical mouse shape has been expertly crafted to let nothing come between you and top-tier play. The speed and control you gain from M75 AIR is simply unrivaled, and at just 60g, M75 AIR is unbelievably light, enabling you to make the most agile movements, sweeps, and recenters. The 26K DPI CORSAIR MARKSMAN optical sensor detects those moves with pro grade precision, and your shots register instantly on optical switches guaranteed for 100 million clicks. When you grasp M75 AIR, you’re holding a mouse that’s sculpted by victory.
Take out enemies with sniper shots using this CORSAIR DARK CORE RGB PRO wireless gaming mouse. The 18,000 DPI optical sensor provides pinpoint precision, while the contoured shape fits comfortably in the palm of your hands. This CORSAIR DARK CORE RGB PRO wireless gaming mouse features up to 50 hours of battery life for uninterrupted gameplay.
Create, control, and champion your playstyle with the new Razer Basilisk V3—the quintessential ergonomic gaming mouse for customized performance. With 10+1 programmable buttons, a dual-mode tilt scroll wheel, and a heavy dose of Razer Chroma RGB, it's time to light up the competition your way.
Pros for CORSAIR - M75 WIRELESS Lightweight Optical RGB Gaming Ambidextrous Mouse - Wireless - Black | |||
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Weight, Battery Life, RGB, DPI, Ergonomics | Weight, Battery Life, DPI, Build Quality, Sensor | RGB, Battery Life, Comfort, Responsiveness, Wireless | Comfort, Weight, Responsiveness, RGB Lighting, Scroll Wheel |
Cons for CORSAIR - M75 WIRELESS Lightweight Optical RGB Gaming Ambidextrous Mouse - Wireless - Black | |||
Side Buttons, Price | Price, Side Buttons, Connectivity | Software, Lag, Connection | Software, Size, Grip |
Customers are impressed with the M75 Wireless Lightweight RGB Gaming Mouse's lightweight design and excellent battery life, frequently praising its comfortable ergonomics and responsive performance. While some users found the side buttons less intuitive than expected, the overall consensus points to a high-quality gaming mouse with appealing features. The price point was noted by some as a potential drawback, particularly without a sale.
The vast majority of our reviews come from verified purchases. Reviews from customers may include My Best Buy members, employees, and Tech Insider Network members (as tagged). Select reviewers may receive discounted products, promotional considerations or entries into drawings for honest, helpful reviews.
Very fast light weight and the charge on it last a long time
Posted by KarsonK
Ehhh its aight side buuttons arnt the best but atleast it works
Posted by Neutrabar
If you’re in the market for a light gaming-oriented mouse that offers bleeding-edge capabilities, fabulous ergonomics, and offers just enough RGB customization to complement your gaming rig without being too gaudy or overstated in the heat of battle, the M75 Wireless RGB from Corsair should be on your short list. It doesn’t necessarily do anything TOO ground-breaking, but what it does do, it does with aplomb and--in my experience and opinion with the M75 thus far--its solid, pace-setting performance and useful, gaming-centric features justify the asking price of just north of a Benjamin (even within the somewhat crowded mid-to-high-tier gaming mouse market). The M75 is an ambidextrous mouse with a smoothly sculpted shell that features a slightly exaggerated hump in the middle. This makes the mouse supremely comfortable for a palm gripper like me. I’ve honestly never used a claw or finger-tip mouse grip before, but from what I can see, the size and shape seem to be designed to accommodate pretty much anyone’s hands and fingers with the exception of maybe those of you with VERY small hands. I wear a men’s XL glove and the mouse easily fills the recess from the tips of my fingers to the heel of my palm—I suspect that gamers with much smaller hands than me might find the size just slightly unwieldy. There are four low-profile magnetic buttons (two on each side) that can be programmed within the Corsair iCUE companion app, as well as the typical left- and right-click mouse buttons and a middle scroll wheel/center-click button. All buttons, even the sides, are reassuringly clicky and offer definitive tactile feedback when activated. The scrolling action has considerable detents you can feel with each scroll of the wheel, but the scroll mechanism itself is silent. Sadly, there is no release switch to allow free-scrolling with the mouse-wheel. On the bottom are two triangular buttons flanking each side of the optical sensor, one for switching between wireless modes (BT or low-latency 2.4Ghz Slipstream wireless dongle) and power on/off, and the other for adjusting DPI settings on the fly. Oh, and you can also go straight-wire to the mouse in a pinch using the somewhat stiff but definitely high-quality feeling 6-foot braided USB-C cable that is included in the package. The hardware provided to serve all these functions is quite robust, with an optical sensor that goes from 100 DPI all the way up to 26,000 DPI, and a dongle that supports a 1000Hz polling rate. The nice, clicky switches I mentioned above are optical (super-fast) and supposedly “guaranteed” to last over 100 million clicks—though I’m not sure how one would prove their usage to make a warranty claim if the mouse gave out somewhere in the 900 thousands. Corsair includes a full set of flat-profile (supposedly no-click) and slightly indented side buttons so you can customize the shell to match the configuration of functional and non-functional buttons that you would want to set up in software later. The side buttons themselves are magnetic and simply “rock” upward away from the mouse if you press down in the inner edge of the button itself--then lift the switch off and pop in the other one. It’s a nice change of pace for a gaming peripheral to NOT require a specialized tool just to make minor adjustments like these. My only gripe here is that the clickable buttons and non-clickable button covers are basically the same height/profile as the shell itself—a little extra pronouncement of the clickable button covers above the surface of the shell would have made it just a little easier to find a good pressure/activation point during a frantic gaming session. In addition to coming default with six onboard DPI settings (from 200 up to 3200 DPI via the DPI toggle on the bottom), each preset is accompanied by a different initial RGB lighting color code to let you know when you’ve cycled from one setting the next. iCUE lets you further customize the DPI presets in 1 DPI increments, but you can also make on-the-fly adjustments in 50 DPI steps using a combination of the bottom DPI button and the left forward/back side buttons. You may not NEED that level of precision, but I imagine there are plenty of serious, competitive/professional gamers out there who would appreciate it. The bottom of the mouse features some sizeable, super-slick PTFE glides—the glides’ grey colorway contrasts nicely from the black shell to make it easier to tell when you might need to seek replacements. Unlike Corsair’s other M75 mice, this one comes with a little RGB for good measure. The lighted Corsair logo is flanked by two “swishes” on the left and right which give it just enough pop to stand out, but not become distracting. Sadly, these three elements only comprise a single lighting zone so there really isn’t any way to make any elaborate or sophisticated RGB movements or patterns across the mouse itself. The bottom of the mouse does have a separate RGB element that can be programmed independently of the top-shell’s illumination, but the light source faces almost completely downward into the mousing surface so the best you get a tiny bit of color cast right around the bottom edge of the mouse. Battery life is one place where the M75 really shines. Running on BT without RGB, you can supposedly get more than 100 hours of use on a single charge. I ran the mouse using the <1ms 2.4Ghz wireless dongle with RGB all around for good measure. After gaming and working 4-6 hours a day on my PC all week long, I was incredibly pleased to find that I didn’t have to recharge the mouse at all because I still had PLENTY of charge left over for some long gaming sessions with my kiddos over the weekend. In case you’re not already part of Corsair’s iCUE ecosystem, make sure you download the ABSOLUTE LATEST version of the iCUE client (v5.12.97 as of this writing) to get the most out of the M75. When I first received my mouse for review, Corsair hadn’t yet released an iCUE client with the M75 drivers on board (or even posted the manual online yet!), so while the mouse was recognized by Windows out of the box, iCUE didn’t see the mouse at all so I couldn’t program any features or adjust any of the deeper settings. However, as of the end of February, the new iCUE update instantly recognized the M75 and brought it up on my iCUE dashboard for monitoring and programming. Admittedly, iCUE had a bad reputation for a while of being a bit bloated and buggy, but lately I’ve had no issues with the client itself (I’ve been using Corsair mechanical keyboards with iCUE for many years) and memory usage is now down to a paltry 250MB including all the Corsair background processes. Within iCUE you can make all the lighting, DPI, and button customizations you’d like, plus there’s an option to calibrate your mouse’s acceleration and performance to your specific mousing surface. It takes a few minutes, and you must be connected via USB to do it, but it’s an interesting feature that supposedly improves precision and mouse movement for those of you who are REALLY serious about your gaming and want to be sure you’re not sacrificing any accuracy when using a mouse pad versus a wooden desk. In use, I’ve found the M75 to be just absurdly…great...though maybe in a no-nonsense kind of way. Mousing action is smooth, precise, and the ergonomics of the mouse itself are some of the best I’ve experienced in nearly 40 years of business, personal, and gaming-oriented mouse use. That said, the onboard RGB and extra bits of hardware under the hood allow the M75 to declare itself a “light mouse” (it clocks in on my scale at just 88 grams), but that’s not to say it’s fair to call it a game-changing ultra-light mouse…there are plenty of mice in the market now surfacing near 60 grams or less. For me, that tiny bit of extra weight is okay…I actually appreciate a little more substance under my hand as I’m muscling the cursor or crosshairs around the screen. But if you are looking for a cutting-edge mouse that feels like an angel’s whisper evaporating under your hand, you might want to try Corsair’s super-light M75 Air instead. Basically, the M75 Wireless RGB is just an all-around great mouse with a better than premium-feeling build quality, enough capabilities and adjustment options onboard and in the companion app to achieve supremely high precision and accuracy, ultra-long battery life, and many other customizations to make it your own. Its slightly larger stature may make it awkward for gamers with very small hands to use comfortably, but otherwise, this mouse really is a good example of getting what you pay for…highly recommended.
Posted by WyldeBlue