


Th ese buttons are joined by a programmable mouse wheel, two buttons located on the left seated under your thumb, and a DPI toggle.Īccording to product shots, the mouse will support RGB illumination in the HyperX logo, and in a single LED strip that runs along the sides and across the front. Slated to arrive some time within the second quarter of 2018, it will rely on OMRON switches mounted under the left- and right-click buttons, promising a duration of up to 50 million clicks. The latest gaming mouse from HyperX relies on a Pixart 3389 optical sensor with a sensitivity of up to 16,000 dots per inch. The MM1000 doesn’t appear to provide wireless 2.4GHz connectivity, requiring the mouse to use the USB pass-through port, or a Wi-Fi dongle plugged into the parent PC’s USB port. For devices that don’t support wireless charging, the station provides Micro USB-B, USB-C, and Lightning Qi adapters. But what makes Corsair’s version different is that it will charge any device that supports Qi wireless charging. That said, the SE model supports the company’s new Qi wireless charging station, the MM1000, that is similar to Logitech’s PowerPlay setup.

This sensor is joined by nine buttons you can program through Corsair’s desktop software. Other features crammed into the Dark Core RGB include a one-millisecond report rate, onboard memory for storing on-the-go profiles, and a built-in rechargeable battery promising up to 24 hours on a single charge. The device relies on the PMW3367 optical sensor promising sensitivities between 100 and 16,000 dots per inch.
