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It’s Thursday night in Riyadh. Ranked match, last round, you flick to the head shot — and your mouse hiccups. Not a skill issue. That’s a hardware issue. The sensor you bought three years ago was good enough for 2022, not for Warzone in 2025.
Here’s the honest breakdown of which gaming mice actually survive a Saudi summer, ship to KSA without a customs headache, and give you the edge in games that matter. No fluff. Three mice. One winner per budget.
Best Gaming Mice in Saudi Arabia 2025 — Tested and Ranked
Gaming mice in KSA got serious in 2025. Prices on Amazon.sa and noon finally caught up with US pricing, Logitech and Razer both shipped proper wireless-for-KSA builds, and the sensors are genuinely that good now. But picking one is harder than it looks — weight, sensor, battery, and whether your palm even fits the shell. Full stop: the mouse that wins tournaments for your ربع might be the worst choice for you. Here are the three we keep recommending after a full year of daily use in Riyadh, Jeddah, and Dammam.
Kazazone Verdict: If you’re competitive in FPS and want the lightest, most responsive mouse in KSA right now, the Logitech G Pro X Superlight 2 is the answer — it’s not cheap, but it earns every riyal. If you want 90% of that performance for less, Razer DeathAdder V3 Hyperspeed is the smartest buy at SAR 549. And if your budget stops at SAR 350, the SteelSeries Rival 5 wired is a serious mouse, not a compromise.
Logitech G Pro X Superlight 2
The tournament mouse, now with a better sensor and a real battery.

4.8/5
(3,200+ global reviews)
Logitech took the mouse that won more esports tournaments than any other and made it lighter, faster, and finally gave it a sensor that keeps up with 2025 monitors. The Hero 2 tracks up to 44,000 DPI — which you’ll never use — but what matters is the tracking is flawless at normal sensitivities, even on a cloth pad that’s been through a Riyadh summer.
At 60 grams, it disappears in your hand. If you’ve been using a 95g mouse, the first week feels weird, then you can’t go back. The 70-hour battery on Lightspeed wireless means you charge it once a week and forget about it. One thing Logitech finally fixed: the USB-C port on the front is no longer awkward to plug in while charging mid-game.
The honest downside? It’s SAR 749 at Amazon.sa. For that kind of money you expect onboard RGB, removable side buttons, customization. You get none of that. This is a deliberately stripped-down mouse for people who care about one thing: winning. If you want RGB and extra buttons for MMOs, scroll down to option 3.
- Lightest premium wireless at 60g
- Hero 2 sensor — flawless tracking
- 70-hour battery, one-week cadence
- Tournament-grade build quality
- Premium price — SAR 749
- No RGB, no extra side buttons
- Symmetric shell only — not ideal for large palms
| Weight | 60g |
| Sensor | Hero 2 (up to 44,000 DPI) |
| Connection | Lightspeed Wireless + USB-C |
| Battery | Up to 70 hours |
| Polling Rate | 8,000 Hz |
Right for you if: You play FPS competitively (Valorant, Warzone, CS2), you’ve got a medium-sized hand, and you care about milliseconds. Also right if you travel with your setup — the lightweight case and lasting battery are made for that.
Razer DeathAdder V3 Hyperspeed
The most ergonomic shape in gaming, now wireless and priced sanely.

4.6/5
(2,100+ global reviews)
The DeathAdder shape is the most cloned ergonomic design in gaming — and there’s a reason. For right-handed palm or claw grip, especially if your hand is medium-to-large, this thing fits like it was molded around your hand in a factory. The Hyperspeed version ditches the cable, keeps the shape, and cuts the price way under the Superlight.
At 78g it’s not the lightest, but it’s light enough that you stop thinking about it after an hour. The Focus Pro 30K sensor is genuinely on par with the Hero 2 in real-world use — they’re both way more accurate than any human needs. Battery lasts around 100 hours on Hyperspeed, which is absurd. Pair it over USB dongle, plug the dongle in your PC, and forget the thing exists.
Where it loses to the Superlight: no 8,000 Hz polling, no RGB (Razer stripped it out to hit the price), and the shell is a bit larger than everything else in this roundup. If your hand is small, try the Viper V3 Pro instead. For everyone else, this is the best value wireless gaming mouse you can buy on Amazon.sa right now.
- Legendary ergonomic shape
- Focus Pro 30K sensor — elite tier
- ~100-hour battery
- SAR 200 cheaper than the Superlight 2
- No RGB
- Polling capped at 1,000 Hz
- Too big for small hands
| Weight | 78g |
| Sensor | Focus Pro 30K |
| Connection | HyperSpeed Wireless + USB-C |
| Battery | Up to 100 hours |
| Buttons | 6 programmable |
Right for you if: You want elite performance without paying elite money, you palm grip with medium or large hands, and you play a mix of FPS, MMO, and general productivity. Also the best call if you resell on Haraj later — Razer holds value better than Logitech in KSA.
SteelSeries Rival 5
Wired, 9 buttons, RGB — the mouse that does more for less.

4.5/5
(1,800+ global reviews)
Let’s be real for a second — not everyone needs a tournament mouse. If you’re playing GTA Online with the ربع on Thursday night, streaming FIFA, or doing a mix of productivity and casual gaming, the Rival 5 at SAR 329 is an objectively smart buy. You’re getting nine programmable buttons, real RGB, and a SteelSeries TrueMove Air sensor that’s genuinely good — this isn’t a corner-cut cheap mouse, it’s a full-feature mouse that happens to be affordable.
The catch: it’s wired. For 2025 that might feel dated, but the cable SteelSeries ships is a paracord-style flexible job, not a stiff old USB. Genuinely, in a normal desk setup you forget the cable is there. And one thing people keep missing — wired means zero battery anxiety, zero dongle-lost panic, and the 1,000 Hz polling is rock solid because there’s no wireless stack introducing latency.
The nine-button layout is a genuinely useful thing for anyone who plays MMOs, MOBAs, or even Excel power-users who bind shortcuts. The thumb rest is sculpted so your thumb actually rests somewhere comfortable instead of dangling off the edge. For SAR 329 you won’t find a mouse with this feature count anywhere else on Amazon.sa.
- 9 programmable buttons
- TrueMove Air sensor, zone RGB
- Excellent thumb rest ergonomics
- No battery, no dongle, no stress
- Wired only
- At 85g, heavier than the other two
- SteelSeries software is hit or miss
| Weight | 85g |
| Sensor | TrueMove Air (18,000 CPI) |
| Connection | Wired (Paracord USB) |
| Buttons | 9 programmable |
| RGB | 10-zone PrismSync |
Right for you if: You want a serious mouse for under SAR 350, you play a variety of games (not just FPS), and you value extra buttons and RGB over weight-saving. Also the safer buy for first-time gaming mouse purchases — wired mice almost never fail within the warranty window.
The mousepad you already own is probably the bottleneck. A 60g premium mouse on a frayed old pad is like a Ferrari on gravel. Budget SAR 80–150 for a proper cloth or hybrid pad.
Replacement feet wear out faster in KSA. Dust and dry air chew through PTFE skates. A spare set (SAR 40–60) buys you an extra year of smooth glide.
USB-C charging cables aren’t in the box for some mice. The Superlight 2 includes one, the DeathAdder includes one — but if you buy a third-party kit check before you pay.
Amazon.sa warranty is not automatic. Keep the email receipt. If the sensor fails inside 12 months, the RMA process is painless — but only if you can prove the date of purchase.
Real math for the Superlight 2: SAR 749 mouse + SAR 120 pad + SAR 50 skates = SAR 919 to have it actually performing the way reviews say.
Things Saudi Gamers Should Know Before Buying
Summer matters more than you think. Saudi summer humidity and AC cycles do weird things to wireless dongles. Mice with 2.4 GHz Lightspeed or HyperSpeed (like the two above) handle it fine. Older Bluetooth-only mice drop packets during peak heat weeks. If you play seriously in Riyadh or Jeddah from June to September, go dedicated 2.4 GHz.
Amazon.sa vs noon vs Jarir pricing. Gaming mice are usually cheapest on Amazon.sa with Prime shipping. Noon gets competitive during White Friday and Ramadan sales. Jarir’s in-store prices are SAR 50–100 higher but you get the mouse today and a proper receipt for warranty — sometimes worth it.
Resale on Haraj is a real factor. Razer and Logitech premium mice resell at 65–75% of original price within the first year if you keep the box. SteelSeries holds around 50–60%. This matters more than you think when you upgrade every 18 months.
Mada and STC Pay both work. All three mice are available on Amazon.sa and noon with Mada and STC Pay checkout. No need to use a credit card unless you’re chasing the miles.
Grip style is not a meme. Palm grip, claw grip, fingertip grip — each one rewards a different mouse shape. The Superlight 2 is a symmetric claw/fingertip shape. The DeathAdder is classic palm. The Rival 5 is ergonomic palm-friendly. Pick for your grip, not the YouTube review.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Is a wireless gaming mouse still worth it in 2025?
Yes — and honestly the debate is over. Modern 2.4 GHz wireless like Lightspeed and HyperSpeed has latency indistinguishable from wired. Every pro now uses wireless. The only reason to go wired in 2025 is budget.
Q: Which mouse is best for FIFA?
FIFA doesn’t really demand a gaming mouse — any of the three above is overkill. If FIFA is 80% of your play, save money and get the Rival 5. The Superlight 2 shines in FPS, not in menu navigation.
Q: Do these work with PS5 or Xbox?
PS5 supports most USB mice for a few games (Fortnite, Warzone). Xbox Series X supports even fewer. Don’t buy a SAR 749 mouse just for console — the console OS doesn’t benefit from it.
Q: How’s the warranty situation in Saudi Arabia?
All three brands honor 2-year warranties in KSA when bought through Amazon.sa or Jarir. Logitech has the smoothest RMA process — ship it to their Dubai hub, replacement back in about 10 days. Razer is fine but slower. SteelSeries is inconsistent.
Q: Small hands — which one?
The Superlight 2 is the best for small hands of these three. The DeathAdder is too big. If your palm is under 18 cm, consider the Razer Viper V3 Pro as an alternative — it’s not in this guide but it’s a better small-hands option.
As an Amazon Associate, Kazazone earns from qualifying purchases. When you buy through our links, we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. This helps us keep creating honest, independent reviews for Saudi gamers.