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Their major flaw is that they purposefully use shitty switches that fail, sometimes within months. This is true even with their absurdly overpriced gaming mice.

I have never had a mouse whose buttons failed until I bought a logitech. Every person I know raves about them until you ask them how many they've had to buy.



I can't confirm that. I have a few Logitech devices and they are still fine after years of heavy use (mx ergo, and master series).


Same, been using a MX Vertical daily for almost 5 years now and, aside from flaking off the finish in some places, it works perfectly fine. Battery life is pretty good as well, I think I can avoid using a cable for months


Nah, I deployed Logitech for ~300 users in a manufacturing environment for years and they were just fine. You got unlucky or are beating the shit out of them.


I’ve had a MX1000 (which did not fail but had terrible battery life), a G7 (which double-clicked on the right button after 3 years), a G602 (which just stopped working one day), a G502 (which stopped clicking at all), and a G604 (same).

I won’t claim to be a statistically representative sample, but from my experience their high-end stuff is expected to break after between 2 to 3 years. I kept going back to them because the hardware is very nice when it works. I gave up and bought a Razer Naga about 3 years ago. Hopefully it fares better in the long run.


Agree. It's rare to find a failed Logitech mouse.


It is actually quite common for some mice because logitech uses the wrong switches for a 3.3v logic level mouse.


I have a drawer full of failed Logitech mice (about 10).

They're mostly M100(?) mice from the MK120 combos. They basically all start doubleclicking eventually.

They're not all from my personal computer though, probably from about 8 different PCs.


Warranty will often get you a new one. I had a mouse fail about 2.5 years in and they sent a new one.

OTOH, it speaks terribly of their quality; a mouse should work fine for 10-20 years, like some mice from 20 years ago.


Even 20 years ago mices weren't always that reliable. I used to have a Microsoft ball mouse from the late nineties and I remember the micro switch giving up after about 4 years. Even the replacements (albeit much cheaper/more generic brands) from the time didn't fare better, but at least by that point they were all optical.

And I say "replacements" because they all didn't last very long, until I got the memo and started buying decent stuff from brands like... logitech. And then there is the conundrum of going with something even more "premium" than a logitech, there's very little guarantee it's really gonna last. You may be paying twice as much for it but it still ends up lasting about as long.


Like the others I can't say I have had a mouse button crap out on me. My problem is with the mouse wheels but I'm not sure if that is the manufacturer's problem or poor cleanliness on my part.


If you don't want to worry about this you can get an Asus mouse that is designed to be repairable: https://rog.asus.com/articles/gaming-keyboards-gaming-mice/g...


I bought some switches from aliexpress for my Logitech G203 and replace them when they fail. I've had it for 5 years now.


Semi-agree. I've had 2 mx525s fail within ~6 months of purchase but I've also had a mx anywhere 2s that I bought used and got 3 years of usage out of it before I had to replace the switches.

I wouldn't buy a cheap mouse from them again.


Three years is below what should be considered acceptable, let alone impressive. I got a bit over ten years of really heavy use out of a dirt-cheap Genius mouse ($3-4) before it had to be replaced, and not because of the switches but because of the physical wear of the case.


I've used a G203 ($20) daily for 4 years and it works like new.




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