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Logitech has launched the G PRO X2 SUPERSTRIKE, and its biggest talking point isn’t the sensor or the weight—it’s what’s inside the buttons. The mouse replaces traditional mechanical microswitches with an inductive analog system paired with real-time haptics, a combination Logitech calls SUPERSTRIKE technology.
The company claims it cuts click latency by up to 30 milliseconds.The system, formally named the Haptic Inductive Trigger System (HITS), uses copper coils to generate an electromagnetic field in place of the physical switch. Click travel is 0.6mm, with 10 levels of actuation point adjustment and 5 rapid trigger reset levels—so you can dial in exactly how shallow or deep a press needs to be before it registers. Haptic actuators fire the moment a click lands, and again on reset, giving you physical confirmation that your input went through.
Intensity is tunable from 1 to 5 in G HUB.
Logitech built this one alongside G2, NAVI, and BLG
The PRO X2 SUPERSTRIKE was co-developed with pro esports outfits G2 Esports, NAVI, and BLG. G2’s mid-laner Caps put it well during early testing: the difference, he said, felt like going from public internet servers to LAN. That’s a specific reference that carries real weight in competitive circles.The sensor is Logitech’s HERO 2, topping out at 44K DPI with an 8 kHz polling rate over LIGHTSPEED Wireless—meaning an input every 0.125 milliseconds.
It tracks up to 888 IPS and handles 88G acceleration, with zero smoothing or filtering applied.
65 grams, 90-hour battery, PTFE feet with curve-cut edges
Logitech kept the mouse at a target weight of 65 grams and fitted it with zero-additive PTFE feet with curve-cut edges for consistent glide. Battery life is rated at 90 hours under constant motion—enough to outlast almost any session you’d throw at it.The G PRO X2 SUPERSTRIKE launches in India in Lunar Eclipse at Rs 23,995.

