
ROG - ROG Keris Wireless
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Based on 1 year's data from Feb 15, 2026 How it works
My first "gaming" mouse is the Razer Atheris, then "upgraded" to the Logitech G102. Currently, my daily driver is the ROG Keris Wireless.
This will be an unpopular choice, but the ASUS ROG Keris Wireless... basically the old shape before the Keris II Ace. I've never had an ergonomic mouse fit my hand so well. It's a lot of things. The smaller size, the weird angles where it just tapers off, the slight slope on the mouse buttons, the way the hump sits in my palm without sort of pushing up against it and forcing a claw grip (i like relaxed claw/finger tip grip). For my 17.78 x 7.62 hand (excluding the thumb because that doesn't actually sit on the mouse. Can call the width 9 if you must), nothing fits better. Wish they didn't stop using that shape, rather than creating another Deathadder clone with the II. If I didn't drunkenly jam the dongle upside down into the bottom slot, making it impossible to pull out, I'd probably still be rocking that mouse.
The standard/Pro or the Hyperspeed? Because the Hyperspeed is notably smaller. I have similar sized hands to OP, and it's near perfect, particularly for claw. Though I prefer the ASUS Keris Wireless (or Aimpoint, but not II) as it's small enough to let me fingertip it.
For a gaming mouse the debounce point must be as low as possible. So very tight tolerance. And for them it is very profitable not to make reliable mice. Because a reliable mouse means low selling volumes, I think, and expensive to produce. In my country I have couple platforms from where I can buy stuff and, separately, you can buy extra-warranty, too. For example a long time ago I bought a crap mouse - ASUS Rog Keries Wireless - with 24 months warranty. Sheet a year and a half that mouse failed with left click double clicking and the wheel failed, too. I paid over 100€ on him + about 30€ another two years of warranty. So after a year and a half got back 3/4 from the money I spent - because it's cheaper to compensate than trying fixing the crap. Very reasonable, I'd say. For many components purchased with a standard 2-year warranty, I also purchased an extra warranty. Just in case.And if something breaks after 4 or 5 years... well, that's it. I'm satisfied, considering that we live in an era of consumerism where quality is not really manufactured anymore. Or it's very expensive. Back in the days, in the eighties or nineties, we had quality, especially in Japanese products - it's a shame that many famous brands, especially electronics, have gone bankrupt (SONY was equivalent of quality and durability - not the case right now).
i see some rog haters are here, rog mouses are a bit overpriced but really good, better quality than something like razer and better software for around same price
Dude, I still use an ~20yr old diamondback with zero issues, but my new naga rmb switch broke right after warranty ended, go figure… Not planning on buying another Razer product, the new stuff isn’t built to last. I switched to rog so I can swap out the switches if one goes, working ok so far.
The mouse is really amazing, very powerful and light, the grip is really clean
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