HyperX already has an ultralight mouse, the Pulsefire Haste, and comes with a set of rough surfaces to improve grip.

Source: Geeknetic added 29th Oct 2020

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by Pablo López 5 hours ago

HyperX has launched yet another mouse under the Pulsefire family, the Haste, which comes with the peculiarity of weighing only 59 grams and have RGB lighting.

Today the ultralight mice are the order of the day. There are numerous models that even reach ridiculous 49 grams as in the case of the Cooler Master MM 720. However, HyperX did not have one of these models until now, which has released the Pulsefire Haste . The Pulsefire family contains numerous mice such as the Raid (with 11 programmable buttons), the Dart (wireless with 90 hours of use), the Surge (lighting all around it) or the FPS Pro RGB (more conventional and old than those mentioned).

Now comes the HyperX Pulsefire Haste with a perforated structure that allows it to reduce its weight up to 59 grams . It has a hidden RGB lighting that is reflected only in the scroll wheel , but it comes with interesting additions.

The HyperX Pulsefire Haste mouse weighs only 59 grams and comes with additives such as sticky rough surfaces

For example, HyperX adds a set of non-slip surfaces to place them in different parts of the mouse and thus be able to grip it better, something similar to what Razer launched recently. On the other hand, the optical sensor PixArt PAW 3335 reaches 16000 DPI and an acceleration of 28 G.

In the ultralight mouse HyperX Pulsefire Haste we find 6 Fully configurable buttons with an estimated durability of 60 million clicks. It currently maintains a refresh rate of 1000 Hz by USB-A cable and comes with a 1.8 meter cable. Despite having a symmetrical design, it only has right-handed side buttons.

The price is 59.99 Euros and we can already find it on their website.

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Pablo López

With 15 years I started overclocking my PC to get every extra FPS I could in games and scratch a few milliseconds in SuperPi, while I was constantly posting about hardware on the Geeknetic forum as a user and reader. They must have been so fed up with continually reading me on the forum that I became part of the writing team, where I continue to report on the latest in technology. Astrophysics and PC games are the hobbies that, after hardware, cover most of my free time.