Corsair M65 RGB Elite – Wired FPS and MOBA Gaming Mouse – Adjustable Weight and Balance – Durable Aluminum Frame – 18,000 DPI Optical Sensor , Black
$59.99 Save:$10.00(14%)
Available in stock
Description
Price: $69.99 - $59.99
(as of Sep 09, 2024 12:28:33 UTC – Details)
The Corsair M65 RGB Elite is CORSAIR’s most advanced FPS gaming mouse yet, built around a premium aluminum frame for proven durability that will last through a lifetime of gaming. A state of the art precision 18, 000 DPI optical sensor, customizable in single DPI steps, provides personalized precision to match your play style, while a tunable weight system allows you to adjust the weight from as little as 97G to 115G. Loaded with extras, including onboard profile storage, multi zone RGB lighting, a dedicated Sniper button, and fully programmable with Corsair iCUE software, it’s time to join the Elite.
Premium Durable Anodized Aluminum Frame: Built to withstand a lifetime of gaming
CORSAIR’s Most Advanced Optical Gaming Sensor:Native 18,000 DPI, adjustable in 1 DPI resolution steps, gives you total sensitivity customization and ultra accurate tracking
Advanced Tunable Weight System: Adjust M65 RGB Elite’s center of gravity to suit your grip, or reduce its weight to just 97 grams
Eight Fully Programmable Buttons: Get the most from your games with the ability to remap or assign custom macros to every click
Ultra Durable Omron Switches: Rated for more than 50 million clicks
Precision Sniper Button: Ergonomically placed sniper button to instantly reduce sensitivity for crucial shots
Customers say
Customers like the comfort and appearance of the mouse. For example, they say it has a comfortable thumb groove and the material feels nice to touch. Some are happy with the size. That said, some complain about the click quality. Opinions are mixed on quality, performance, value, and button.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Amazon Customer –
My favorite mouse!
I’m a gamer and I’m on my second mouse since 2016. Only reason the 1st one failed is I got some fuzz under the left mouse button and it stopped clicking. I tore it apart but bent a little metal piece rendering it useless. That 1st one lasted 3 years and this one is going on 4 with heavy gaming. So, I just bought 2 more for a back up for myself or anyone else in the house that needs one some time. This is hands down my favorite mouse and it’ll take a whole lot of convincing to get me to try out any other.
Luigi Redford Chun –
Great Gaming Mouse
Great overall gaming mouse, great for any type of game. I play a variety of genres, from ARPG’s, MMO, 1st & 3rd person RPG’s, FPS, etc. This mouse has great sensitivity settings, and the Corsair software works great for customization.The removable weights under the mouse makes it great to customize how heavy it is. I’ve taken two off and found the mouse weighs exactly how I want it to like that.The mouse has quick DPi change buttons that go up and down. You can set the speed for each setting and what color that setting is. DPi can go extremely high.The sniper button is great. When I play Escape from Tarkov, I’ll crouch, hold breath, and hold the sniper button for even more accuracy. The mouse can quick turn / flick really well. Hand doesn’t hurt from 3-5+ hours of gaming. It has been so good for that more hardcore type of game.One thing: The mouse will somehow disconnect and stop working sometimes. It will be plugged in and the light will be on, but the mouse pointer just sits there. Not sure what it is, it could be an error with my personal PC setup. I do have it running on a USB splitter, so maybe the issue is with the splitter and not the mouse.Overall, best mouse I have owned. I will be enjoying it for many years to come.
Lawrence Moore –
Comfortable to Use
It’s a well-built mouse that is ergonomically comoftable to use.
Mike –
Horrible Quality Control, Trash Customer Support.
I absolutely love everything about this mouse. I think it’s a decent price, and it’s so so smooth. However, every single purchase is going to be a roulette every day for whether or not it works. I had the older version of this mouse awhile ago. Surprisingly, it lasted about 2-3 years before it started to have double click issues. As I said, I love the mouse, so I picked up this newer version when the old one started double-clicking. The new one felt just as good, but after about 6 months of use I had an inexplicable issue where every time I plugged it in it just said “USB device not recognized.” I did nearly everything to try and fix this, but the annoying thing was with a firmware flash I was able to get it to work anywhere from 2-30 minutes, before it would just crap out and give me the same error. When I went to customer support about it, they said I would need to send the item in, pay for shipping and packing and all that, and they would take it in and MAYBE, send me back a new one. Why do I need to send back a broken mouse? I’ve had a processor from AMD and a headset from HyperX that both crapped out on me at some point, and their customer support just sent me another unit no questions asked. Why does corsair feel the need to do this with a less than $50 mouse? I will never understand. So in the end, I didn’t want to deal with all that, so I’m just abstaining from Corsair mice from now on. I think a decent amount of their other products are GREAT, they just cannot get the mouse down for whatever reason. If the RGB is important to you like it is for me, just get something somewhat cheap that lets you change the lighting. iCUE doesn’t do much on the mouse anyway. I’m starting with a $20 RedDragon mouse that just came in today, and I’m really liking it so far.
Letalis –
A good mouse, but not necessarily for everyone
M65 Elite(Forgot I hadn’t dropped a review of this one yet, better late than never…)The Basics:Medium mouse with unique shape, 3391 sensor, 50M omrons on primary buttons. Two zone RGB, controllable via software. Time in use prior to compiling review was 8 days.I wanted to view this mouse as a potential G502 killer. Hard to find something with excellent specs for fingertip which also is under 100g and a well-placed sniper button. Really, if you want an accurate sensor and a sniper button from a well known brand, the only other names in town are the G502 and Razer Basilisk. The M65 Elite has the advantage of being lighter than either of those competitors once it loses the adjustable weights.The Good:- Primary Clicks (B+): On the light side of moderate but spammable and quite responsive. Some very slight pretravel on both, but it is minimal. Clicks are rather quiet.- Materials and Build Quality (A): Plastic on top is smooth plastic, coarse plastic on the sides, aluminum on the bottom. The materials themselves feel good and there are no rattles here either. Durability seems like it should be good. Of course in my experience, itâs almost always the scroll wheel that goes first.- Scroll Wheel (B+): has light scroll resistance, steps are more muted than Iâd like but they suffice and do not have any play between steps. click resistance is light and the wheel has a pleasant rubber tread.- Mouse Feet (B+): Smooth, fast glide, but with moderate noise. Overall the mouse feet are a positive.- Sensor Tracking (A): Snappy and tracking is outstanding. The 3391 is a joy to use, nailing the sense of being both direct and snappy. I prefer it over the 3360 and lower, as well as the 3389 and HERO sensor. I put it in my personal “top tier” in terms of (unscientific) âsensor feelâ along with the 3366 and Tru Move 3.- Looks. (B) The mouse is kinda sexy. The RGB is beautiful with lots of options. For what itâs worth, the logo is my favorite of any brand and the aluminum accents are well done for what they are, even if I hate the added weight.The Middling:- The DPI Buttons (C): Require moderate force, no accidental actuations, very muted sound but tactility feels cheap. Placement is actually useful in some cases though, which is more than most other mice.- Liftoff Distance (B-): Cannot be adjusted and is on the high side at 2 DVDs, maybe a touch more. I did not find it distracting in-game, nor did I notice it adversely affecting performance, but thereâs better out there.- Weight (C): 97-100 g without weights. The mouse feet make it feel lighter than it deserves and it is surprisingly light given how much of the mouse is made of metal. That said, Iâm not sure the fact you CAN make a mouse of of metal means you SHOULD.- Grip. (C) Despite the coarseness of the plastic sides, they can be slick with dry hands. Simply breathing on your hands can improve grip considerably.The Bad:- Ergonomics. (C) Rather wide. Best for large claw and large fingertip. The weight and balance make it uninviting for a large palm gripper, but might work for a med-small palm. I gave time to 8 distinct grips with this mouse. While some were effective, and some were comfortable, only one was both effective and comfy. Thatâs all it takes, but it took a little while to get thereâ¦- No access to internals. If you own it for over two years or you want to open it up, good luck. Nothing on the box or documentation states that there are omrons or a 3391 sensor. Iâd prefer the specs on the box just like Logitech and not trust the less reliable Amazon storepage which has a bad record. âJust trust me, itâs all in thereâ doesnât fly.- Weight system. (C-) Even though you likely wonât be fiddling with the mouse weights on a routine basis, they are clunky. 6 pieces total and requires a flathead screwdriver to get them out in the first place. It may be the least convenient adjustable weight system Iâve seen.- iCue software (C): It has questionable EULA. âWe will collect data from your system, but we promise not to identify you….âit suggests that they do collect data that COULD identify you and that is no good. iCue is very bloated in comparison to offerings from other manufacturers. Basic mouse functions on other mice are handled with software that boots up instantly and weighs in at 4 to 12 MB in size. Even accounting for the increased functionality, thereâs no reason (that isnât suspicious) which would require iCue to be the better part of a gigabyte. ICue is >Terraria in size…- Software UI is horridly unintuitive and a bad pairing for all the features that it is capable of. That said, if you take the time to learn it, there are more lighting and macro options here than any other software platform Iâve seen.- The sniper button is red with a little crosshair icon on it. Itâs somewhat tasteful for what it is, but still just gushes âdedicated gamer mouse.â Also, since the sniper button is in a position where some people may want to use its surface to grasp the mouse, the fact that it has a very slick, glossy finish doesnât help anything. At least the actuation force is high so that you wonât accidentally click it when picking up the mouse.The Conclusion:The M65 Elite is a quality product, but not necessarily a safe purchase. It is a fun mouse, but not a hardcore mouse in my opinion, even if it has âhardcoreâ components. It has aggressive looks that may not be your thing in three years. You might wake up next to it and think, “was I sane when I made this choice?” It does not dethrone the G502 as a productivity or gaming mouse primarily due to shape, but it is not a bad mouse and many will be plenty happy with it.The weakest parts of this ownership experience are the shape, followed by the software, LOD and glossy sniper button. The M65 Elite succeeds in being both incredibly sexy and quite unique if you donât consider the predecessor model. I consider this mouse to be Corsairâs most unique mouse in terms of both shape and looks. Overall, it’s good stuff, fun to use, always room for improvement.Bang for $50 Bucks: BNit-Noid Rating: 8.5
Linc –
I bought this to replace my older M65 RGB mouse that had a failing scroll wheel. The subtly changed shape is immediately noticeable when switching back to back, and is slightly better on the Elite. The slightly lower weight of the Elite is also immediately noticeable. I have slightly smaller hands, and use a somewhat in-between claw and palm grip on this mouse, and I find the side buttons are positioned much better on the Elite. The DPI switching buttons being closer together is also a nice improvement. However, the single biggest improvement on the Elite is the mouse wheel. It’s still just as precise as before, but it feels much lighter and the middle button is much easier to press. The optical sensor tracks quite well on my old, black cloth mouse pad. Even running it at the exact same DPI settings as my old M65, the Elite does feel more direct and responsive.If you were already planning on spending $70-$100 on a mouse, this should be a top consideration for you. It does lack some features that some of the competition has, and the shape may or may not be for you, but the simplicity, lightness, directness, and general build quality make this one of my all-time favourite mice.That said, is this really worth paying nearly double what the previous generation currently costs? This is a tough call. I certainly don’t regret this purchase, but if you’re not ready to spend this kind of money on a mouse, the previous version is still a good choice.
STR –
HabÃa comprado otros mouses “gamer” y este los supera por mucho, al ser una marca como corsair, es garantÃa de calidad.Hablando del producto especificamente, el mouse para mi gusto es pesado con las tres pesas pero si se le quitan es muy ligero. El botón de “sniper” se me hace inútil, ya que se debe mantener presionado para reducir los dpi. y creo que la fuerza con que debe presionar es excesiva y te resta presición, ademas de que en muchos juegos eso se puede configurar para que al hacer zoom se reduzcan los dpi. Y otra cosa es que no se le puede asignar como un botón extra. Solo sirve para reducir los dpi momentáneamente. Ese es el unico punto en contra. El sensor se siente super preciso y por ultimo los efectos de iluminación no sobresalen pero lucen bien.
Rick –
Sturdy mouse with aluminium frame. Glides well and suitable for medium sized hands. Unique shape. Fps key seems useless irl but can remap
Ian Watson –
fITS REALLY WELL IN THE HAND AND THE FORWARD/BACKWARD BUTTONS ARE LARGE AND EASY TO REACH
Obryan Costa –
Mouse extremamente sensÃvel na resposta na qual é um belo ponto principal, não é muito pesado que pra mim tá bom e possui uma ótima precisão.Se apresentar qualquer defeito venho atualizar a postagem.