Logitech PRO X2 SUPERSTRIKE: a gaming mouse where the click is the real feature
My experience and take on the Logitech PRO X2 SUPERSTRIKE, a new LIGHTSPEED gaming mouse with SUPERSTRIKE technology and a tunable click feel.
Published · May 21, 2026

For a long time, I thought gaming mice had basically reached the point of "okay, enough".
Light, wireless, good sensor, done.
Then Logitech shows up with the PRO X2 SUPERSTRIKE and somehow makes the click interesting again.
Not RGB. Not a wilder shape. Not "now with 0.3 grams less packaging heaviness".
The click.
What SUPERSTRIKE means
Logitech calls the system Haptic Inductive Trigger System, or HITS.
The idea behind it: the main buttons use a combination of inductive sensing and haptic feedback. On top of that, you get adjustable actuation and reset points. Put simply: you can influence how early a click triggers and how quickly it is ready again.
That sounds extremely like esports marketing.
Of course it partly is.
But at least it is marketing in a place I actually find interesting on a mouse. The click is what you constantly use. If something there feels more direct, shorter or more controlled, you notice it more than the next number on the box.
Who this is interesting for
Not everyone.
If you play a round every few weeks and your mouse mostly handles email, browser tabs and cat videos, the PRO X2 SUPERSTRIKE is probably overkill.
But if you are sensitive to mouse feel, play fast shooters or simply enjoy tuning input devices very precisely, it becomes interesting.
I like products like this because they do not only claim to be "better". They try to change a concrete feeling.
What I like about it
- The click is the focus. That is rare and much more interesting than another LED zone.
- LIGHTSPEED is familiar and strong. Logitech is not this present in wireless gaming mice by accident.
- Adjustability makes sense. Not as a toy for everyone, but for people who really notice click behavior.
- The PRO series stays focused. Not an overloaded spaceship, but a tool for fast inputs.
Together with a good keyboard like the Keychron Q3 Max, you quickly notice how much input devices shape everyday work and play. You touch these things every day. When they are good, the setup becomes calmer.
The honest take
This is not a mouse I would blindly recommend to everyone.
It is new, expensive and very specific. That is exactly why you should ask whether adjustable click behavior truly helps you, or whether you are just curious about the next high-end gaming thing.
Both are allowed.
Only one is a good buying decision.
Is it good stuff?
Yes, but special good stuff.
The Logitech PRO X2 SUPERSTRIKE is not the sensible default recommendation for everyone. It is more of a mouse for people who do not immediately check out when they hear "click latency", "reset point" and "actuation feel".
For normal people, that sounds absurd.
For tech people, it sounds like a Saturday night.
And that makes it pretty at home here.
✦The PRO X2 SUPERSTRIKE is not for people who do not care. It is for people who want to feel what a click feels like.
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