Razer Naga V2 HyperSpeed Wireless MMO Gaming Mouse: 19 Programmable Buttons – HyperScroll Technology – Focus Pro 30K Optical Sensor – Mechanical Mouse Switches Gen-2 – Up to 400 Hr Battery Life

Razer Naga V2 HyperSpeed Wireless MMO Gaming Mouse: 19 Programmable Buttons – HyperScroll Technology – Focus Pro 30K Optical Sensor – Mechanical Mouse Switches Gen-2 – Up to 400 Hr Battery Life

Current price is: $59.99. Original price was: $99.99.

Rise to the top your guild with the Razer Naga V2 HyperSpeed—a best-in-slot wireless ergonomic MMO mouse. Optimize skill rotations with an arsenal of 19 buttons and a dual mode scroll wheel. Power through raid progression with potent wireless performance backed by up to 250 hours of battery life on HyperSpeed Wireless.
19 PROGRAMMABLE BUTTONS — Armed with ergonomically positioned buttons that provide an arsenal of commands at the fingertips for mapping out the essentials or going all out with advanced macros
RAZER HYPERSPEED WIRELESS (2.4 GHZ) AND BLUETOOTH — Unleash seamless, low-latency performance that’s 25% faster than other wireless tech or switch to Bluetooth for longer hours of gaming
POWERED BY RAZER HYPERSCROLL TECHNOLOGY — Perform repeated commands rapidly or blaze through content in free-spin mode, or activate tactile mode for enhanced precision and satisfying feedback
LONG BATTERY LIFE — With up to 400 hours on Bluetooth and 250 hours of seamless low-latency gaming on Razer HyperSpeed Wireless (2.4GHz), last longer in the heat of battle with this mouse before having to replace its battery
FOCUS PRO 30K OPTICAL SENSOR — Razer’s brand-new sensor provides flawless tracking performance on a wider variety of surfaces including glass —supported by intelligent functions for enhanced aim and control
MECHANICAL MOUSE SWITCHES GEN 2 — With gold-plated contact points, the switches are less prone to degrading and have a longer lifespan of up to 60 million clicks
#1 SELLING PC GAMING PERIPHERALS BRAND IN THE U.S. — Source — Circana, Retail Tracking Service, U.S., Dollar Sales, Gaming Designed Mice, Keyboards, and PC Headsets, Jan. 2019- Dec. 2023 combined
OPTIMIZE MOUSE ACCURACY — Improve accuracy by disabling the “Enhance pointer precision” option in the Windows mouse settings, and further optimize performance using the Razer Synapse App

9 reviews for Razer Naga V2 HyperSpeed Wireless MMO Gaming Mouse: 19 Programmable Buttons – HyperScroll Technology – Focus Pro 30K Optical Sensor – Mechanical Mouse Switches Gen-2 – Up to 400 Hr Battery Life

  1. Kimberly Clark

    Logitech G604 Replacement?
    So, I was in need of a new mouse. My Logitech G604 died on me. I wanted something with a free wheel scrolling with 6+ side buttons. There is only one mouse that fits this. As of this writing that is this mouse the Razor Naga Pro v2. The G604 had two scroll modes, one bumped and free wheel scroll. To my surprise, the Razor Naga Pro v2 has a controlled wheel. In that you can make it bumpy, free wheel or less bumpy or quick bumpy, plus you can change the resistance of the wheel etc… AND it is software controlled by software or the non-analog button behind the wheel. I don’t know how Razor pulled this off but it is amazing. Well worth the price of $170 verses the now $300+ Logitech G604 (only because it has been discontinued. Go ahead search for the G604 on Amazon if you don’t believe me). And on top of that, once you program your macros or keyboard shortcuts using Razor’s software, you won’t need it anymore. Only to re-program your mouse. All your settings are stored on the mouse. I see many people complaining on other forums about the Logitech G604 and how there is nothing to replace it. There is. This mouse has it and then some.

  2. Sean C

    Great Warranty
    There’s not a ton of options for MMO mice, this is one of the better ones.Wireless, decent battery life, so far it has worked with rechargeable batteries. The 2 function keys in the top left index finger area are what make this mouse nice. They are much easier to click than the 2 buttons behind the scroll wheel configuration, which is more common.My first mouse did have some numpad keys go bad but Razor’s warranty is excellent.

  3. BigDog

    Razer’s best Naga for long-time Logitech G600 users
    I will start by saying I haven’t actually used this mouse for gaming – as in, I haven’t taken advantage of its buttons. That’s because I am not playing mouse and keyboard games that require me to fire off many inputs such as an MMO or a MOBA, and most of my gaming is done on a Dualsense controller.Why get an MMO mouse then? Well, the power user community REQUIRES something like this mouse (and other input devices as well). When I use CAT (computer assisted translation) software, I map practically all my hotkeys to the mouse. When I do data entry type tasks, I map all sorts of data scrapping scripts to the buttons. When I write code, I map shortcuts to it. It is the best.I come from a Logitech G600 that developed double clicking, and I swore that, barring it broke (which it did), I would not upgrade because modern options offered nothing worth switching to. I was dead wrong.The sensor is great, the notched / free spinning wheel is great, it is light (coming from a Logitech G600), and it glides smoothly. Razer’s software is of course bad, and so is Logitech’s software. But perhaps the most egregious fault of its software (and design of the Naga lineup) is that Hypershift is for all intents and purposes useless.Hypershift is like Logitech’s Shift and as the name would imply, it means that one button has a normal binding and a shift binding. So Button 1 can perform two actions. Why is it useless? Because it is a light (comparatively) mouse with a cluster of small buttons you operate with your thumb, so how on earth are you supposed to hold one button and press another? Makes no sense. The most sensible solution would be software-side, making an hypershift toggle, but it is not there. Logitech’s G600 has a ring finger exclusively dedicated to being a shift button (though you can also remap it to something else) and so avoids this issue.It is not a big deal for me, as I hardly used shift in my previous G600 because it puts far too much stress in my fingers. I map the thumb pad to extra Fn keys such as F13-F25 and write scripts in AHK, which completely dwarfs ANYTHING Razer’s or Logitech’s software could so since there are endless combinations (shift, alt, ctrl, windows key, plus combinations of the previous, plus one of the Fn keys) but I believe Razer should still make a toggle function for Hypershift so that it is not silly.Oh, and the battery requirement is a plus. Hands down. I have 4 rechargeable white eneloops and I change batteries like every 2 to 3 weeks. Better than momentarily plugging my mouse and goes well with my wireless Keychron keyboard.

  4. Sterofuse

    Same Naga productivity/gaming excellence plus a few gimmicks/tradeoffs.
    Background: I have gone through two Naga Chroma’s, two Naga Trinity’s, and one Naga Pro (V1) since 2017, they each lasted roughly two years before starting to have issues. The Trinity and earlier Chroma versions had issues witht he left click switch/button waearing out over time, the Naga Pro V1, the switches were fine but the scroll wheel started to scroll in the opposite direction and not register scroll-clicks after two years but the left/right-click was still fine.Naga Pro V2 Review: This version boasts Gen 3 switches vs the Gen 2 in the Pro V1, so hopefully they are even more durable, they feel a little stiffer to click but that could also just be me comparing it to a 2-year old Naga Pro V1 that I am replacing. The wired cord is still removable and optional if you go wireless, but this year it is upgraded to USB-C instead of micro-usb. A welcome improvement! Not so welcome, is that the cable is sleeved instead of braided so it looks cheaper and the sleeve bunches up in places because it is longer than the cable itself. When paying double the price of the last gen Naga Pro V1 (roughly $80), this seems like a step in the wrong direction when shelling out $180 for the new version. I keep my mouse wired so it is always charging and I don’t have an excuse for latency or input lag.Now, the big change here is the new HYPERSCROLL PRO WHEEL. My review after using it for a week so far, it’s leaning to the gimmicky side but with some Razer Synapse improvements it could be made better with software updates. So what is it? Imagine being able to choose how granular/chunky/clicky/smooth your scroll wheel scrolls. For gaming I tend to keep it in “Distinct” mode, which has high scroll tension and only 15 “Scroll Steps” so with a normal finger length scroll it will only cycle between weapons for example about 5 times. Now if I switch over to excel and want to scroll through rows of data, that would be quite tedious, and with the higher tension, quite a finger workout, so you can swap the scrolling mode into Ultra-fine or even Smooth Scroll mode and get way more scroll steps per revolution of the scroll wheel.Now here are my gripes about this system. There is no true friction-less unlimited spin scrolling mode where the scroll wheel will keep rolling after you “fling” it in a direction. It DOES have a “Smooth Scroll” mode with basically no friction but the second you let off the wheel its stopped. Also, the Scroll Wheel Stages are not associated with a mouse profile, so you can’t associate “Distinct” scrolling mode with one game for tactile/granular weapon cycling and “Ultra-fine” with another game, perhaps a civ game where you want to zoom in really close to see your city up close. You have to choose your profile (or have synapse associate a profile with a linked game) and then change the scrolling type independently. They did change the behavior of the up/down buttons under the scroll wheel, they used to be higher/lower DPI stages, now the top button cycles scroll stages and the bottom cycles DPI stages. To be fair, I can work with that. What frustrates me is that DPI stages are associated to mouse profiles, why cant scroll stages be as well? A simple software update could fix that. You can also disable Scroll Stage types you don’t like/wouldn’t ever use to skip them in the cycle when clicking through them. Some other people have also pointed out that there is only on “custom” slot in synapse where you can create your own Scroll Wheel Stage profile. I’ll give it to them, seems dumb, let people make as many as they want.Overall, I am really disappointed there isn’t a viable/equivalent replacement for the Naga Pro V1. The V2 Hyperspeed come sin at the right price ($80-ish, same as the old Naga Pro V1) but doesn’t have swap-able side plates and doesn’t have a wired option, battery only. I wish they made the Naga Pro V2 in a HyperScroll Variant and an option with just two modes, arbitrary standard notched scrolling, and truly free-spinning bearing scrolling like some of Logitech’s mice. And if it came in considerably cheaper since it doesn’t need to have variable scroll tension, that would be my dream mouse.The Naga Pro V2 is certainly neat/unique, but in my opinion not worth anywhere near $180. Some software updates could help swallow the sting of the price, but who knows if that will happen in the future. Always purchase based on today’s features, not future promises/hopes. At the end of the day, I will probably always be buying the latest version of the Naga line since it’s somehow still the ONLY cloud-synced mouse with 12 programmable side thumb switches and that’s just hard to go back from once you’ve mastered your macros for gaming and office productivity. (Everyone that works in spreadsheets heavily or CAD style work should have a mouse like this)

  5. Ricardo Pacab

    Definitivamente fue una excelente compra. No soy gamer, soy programador. Lo compré principalmente por la cantidad de botones que tiene ya que requiero de accesos directos y macros para acelerar la escritura de código y otras cosas. Programar es prácticamente copiar y pegar jaja. Tengo personalizado los botones para Ctrl + C, Ctrl + V, Enter, F5, adelante, atrás, subir y bajar volumen, etc.El scroll horizontal también me ayuda cuando tengo que navegar en archivos largos a lo ancho o en hojas de excel; del mismo modo, el scroll vertical libre es de gran ayuda cuando tengo archivos de miles de líneas de código o en páginas web largos. Me ha servido de mucho para no tener que hacer combinaciones con el teclado ya que simplemente presiono un botón con el pulgar. Me costó un poco al principio aprender la ubicación de los botones, pero conforme se desarrolla la memoria muscular mi productividad y velocidad ha ido en aumento.Igual tengo dos empleos por lo que trabajo con dos PC distintas y con el switch que se ubica en la parte de abajo facilita cambiar entre equipos en cuestión de segundos; un equipo lo uso con bluetooth y el otro con el dongle 2.4 ghz. Eso sí, está limitado a solo dos equipos. Me hubiese gustado que soporte un dispositivo más.Anteriormente había adquirido el Logitech mx master 3s, pero era un mouse muy grande y pesado para mi pequeña mano por lo que me resultaba incómodo trabajar. Luego adquirí el Logitech M720 Triathlon, este fue mucho más cómodo para mi mano, pero con el tiempo sentí que requería de más botones y opté por compra este Razer. Este también es un poco grande y pesadito, pero no tanto como el mx master 3s. De momento, en mi opinión, considero este Razer mucho mejor que los dos anteriores de Logitech.El software de Razer Synapse brinda un mundo de configuraciones que sirven principalmente para juegos, pero le he sabido sacara provecho para productividad. Por ejemplo, se puede crear distintos perfiles para guardar la configuración de los botones. Eso es muy conveniente si tienes una configuración para un juego y una configuración distinta para otro juego y no tener que estar configurando los botones cada que cambias de juego. La configuración se guarda en el mouse, no en el equipo como con otras marcas, de modo que no es necesario volver a configurar el mouse cuando lo conectas a un nuevo equipo. Hasta ahora solo un equipo no detectó las configuraciones guardadas, pero es el único caso.Sobre la batería, pensé si solo duraría un par de días porque lo uso durante la jornada completa del día, pero llevo un mes con él y apenas va en un 60 %. La batería que trajo es un Energizer alcalina, eso también ayuda a la larga duración por lo que seguiré comprando baterías alcalinas de la misma marca o Duracell, pero no está de más adquirir baterías recargables para ayudar al medio ambiente jeje.Esa ha sido mi experiencia durante el primer mes. Seguiré actualizando mi reseña conforme lo siga usando.

  6. Baderalharbi

    Work properly

  7. しし

    ゲームでは移動しながらアビリティ使える作業ではコピーペーストだけでなく左側のボタンをカスタマイズできてショートカットキーを登録しておくといちいちキーボードに目をやらなくても操作可能。特にいいのが専用のカスタマイズ画面でテンプレートを分けられる。いちいち作業とゲームごとにボタンをカスタマイズする必要がないのがいいところ。

  8. Syl

    Very fast delivery, mouse is good

  9. adam

    Quick delivery. Only problem i could see was damave to the packaging. Great deal

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