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Hitscan Hyperlight Review: A Little Mouse With Big Ambitions

As good as it gets without paying the Logitech tax. Almost perfect. Almost.

TL;DR

  • Ultra accurate and easy to control
  • Perfect size for smaller hands and claw or fingertip grips
  • Price that undercuts the big brands while matching their speed
  • One flaw keeps it from S-tier for me: a recurring scratchy, metallic scroll wheel feel that shows up over time, even on replacement units

Affiliate link: https://hitscan.com/?ref=TRISTAN
Coupon code: Use code TRISTAN for 5% off at checkout


I have tested a lot of gaming mice. The Hitscan Hyperlight immediately stood out because it is featherweight, fast, and far cheaper than the usual suspects. On paper it is an endgame mouse for both work and play. In practice it is very, very close. If Hitscan fixes one mechanical issue that has followed me across four different units, this would be my easy recommendation as a straight competitor to the new Superlight 2c without the premium price.

Design and Comfort

The Hyperlight is small, safe, and symmetrical. Think Viper Mini proportions but with a very controlled, modern shell and a mid hump that does not force your hand into anything weird. My hands are on the smaller side. This mouse fits like it was made for me. Fingertip and claw are effortless. Palm works if your hands are small. The matte coating is fantastic and grippy with a slightly chalky feel that does not turn slick mid match or mid edit session. The shell is solid. No creaks, no flex, no rattle. You can toss it in a bag without a second thought.

Compared to Logitech’s 2c, the Hyperlight gives you a touch more usable room. The 2c is shorter in length and can feel cramped unless your hands are truly small. Hyperlight’s slightly roomier footprint makes it the better general recommendation for most people while still feeling fast and compact.

Work Performance: Editing and Precision

The Hyperlight is not just a game-only toy. For photo and video work, it is a precision instrument. Micro-adjusting masks, finessing keyframes, tracing selections, scrubbing timelines. Cursor control feels crisp and repeatable. The low mass helps with tiny corrections because you are not fighting inertia every time you stop or start. I keep two DPI profiles set and bounce between them on the mouse for design versus general desktop use. It never jitters and never loses track even on weird surfaces.

Play Performance: Speed and Control

In FPS and MOBAs the Hyperlight feels lightning quick. Click latency is excellent. Tracking is consistent. Flicks feel effortless because the thing practically levitates. I tested both the stock 2.4 GHz receiver and the optional 8K wireless dongle. At 1K polling it already feels dialed for competitive play. At 8K you are into diminishing returns territory unless you have a powerful PC and a need to chase numbers. It still works and it is hilariously responsive if you want to live that life. Battery life is good in 1K mode and understandably shorter when you push higher polling.

Oddly delightful: the clicks seem to get more and more satisfying the longer I play, like the mouse warms up to you. In a long Battlefield session this happened multiple times. It sounds silly, but it was fantastic.

A note on the 8K dongle LED

I wish the dongle had a more granular battery indicator. Orange for low would save a few heart attacks. Right now it is white, white, white, then red, and if you notice red you are basically on borrowed time. Fun for adrenaline, bad for ranked.

“Holy crap I love this mouse but seeing that red turn on on the dongle is scary! There is about 2 minutes before empty when you see it light up, if you see it.”

Redditor

The Scroll Wheel Saga

Time to talk about the only real dealbreaker for some people. The scroll wheel develops a scratchy, metallic sound and feel. Not a huge clunk. Not wobble. A faint metal-on-metal rasp that shows up most when you scroll quickly. I went through four units. I even spoke directly with the owner. They personally tested the two I sent back, told me it was unacceptable, and sent two more replacements. The service was excellent. The replacements were new and initially better. Over time the scratchy wheel scroll came back on both. In my opinion this is not a rare defect. It is a manufacturing tolerance or component issue that affects all units to some degree.

Functionally the wheel still scrolls fine. Middle click is fine. Steps are defined. But for long reads or when using the wheel for weapon swaps, the scratch becomes very noticeable. Fix this and the Hyperlight jumps a full letter grade.

“There are times where there’s this loose grinding feel and high pitch sound during scrolling. It does not affect input, but it is there.”

Community Member Discord

Wired Use and Cable

Charging over USB-C. Wired use is possible, but the included cable sucks. It is stiff, not very flexible, and because the USB-C port is slightly recessed/angled, many soft third-party cables will not seat properly either. If you want to run this mouse wired, plan to buy a compatible, flexible cable that fits the port geometry.

Battery Strategy and Dongles

Because of the LED behavior and the stiff stock cable, I run two Hyperlights in rotation: one on the desk in use, one plugged in and charging for a quick swap. I also use two 8K dongles and mark one with a white piece of tape so I always know which dongle pairs to the white mouse and which to the black.

Battery anxiety is real with the current LED scheme, so I run two Hyperlights in rotation: one on the desk in use, one plugged in charging. I also use two 8K dongles and mark one with a white piece of tape so I always know which dongle pairs to the white mouse and which to the black.

Comparisons

Hyperlight vs Logitech Pro X Superlight 2c

  • Size and fit: The 2c is actually shorter in length. If you have smaller hands, the 2c can feel great. If you have medium hands or prefer a little more room, the Hyperlight is more forgiving and will fit more people comfortably.
  • Weight: Hyperlight still feels dramatically lighter in hand. You notice it instantly when snapping to targets or doing micro-corrections.
  • Shape: Both are safe, ambi shapes. The 2c’s shorter length can feel cramped if you are not truly small-handed. Hyperlight gives more support without feeling bulky.
  • Clicks and latency: Both are elite. You will not miss shots because of either.
  • Scroll: Logitech is quieter and more refined. Hyperlight needs that fix.
  • Software: Logitech’s suite is mature with clean device detection. Hyperlight’s software works but is finicky.
  • Price: Hyperlight saves you a big chunk of cash. If you do not want to pay the Logitech premium, this is the move.

Hyperlight vs Mchose A7

  • Weight: They are both VERY similar.
  • Connectivity: Both extremely similar
  • QC: My Mchose and Hyperlight shells were consistently solid. A7 has more variance reported by the community. Your mileage may vary.
  • Use case: If you want a budget Superlight-style shape in a smaller size, A7 makes sense. These are two very competitive mice.

Hyperlight vs Lamzu Maya

  • Weight and size: Very similar size class. Maya is a few grams heavier. Both favor claw and fingertip. If you want a hair more stability and width, Maya might feel more planted.
  • Feel: Lamzu’s scroll is quiet. Hyperlight’s scroll is not. Both glide well and track flawlessly.
  • Polling upgrades: Both offer higher polling with optional dongles.
  • Preference: I reach for Hyperlight because it feels faster and disappears in my hand. If you want a slightly more refined scroll and a touch more mass, go Maya.

Daily Use Notes

  • Coating stays grippy even when warm. No slippery shine after long sessions.
  • Feet are fast and consistent. I prefer the larger set included in the box. Glide is excellent on glass and cloth.
  • Side buttons are easy to hit without accidental presses. Great for back/forward in a browser and utility binds in games.
  • Charging over USB-C. Wired use is possible, but the included cable is stiff and some third-party cables may not fit the port cleanly.
  • Battery anxiety is real with the current LED scheme, so I run two Hyperlights: one is on the desk running, one is plugged in charging. I even use two 8K dongles and mark one with a white piece of tape so I know which pairs to the white mouse and which to the black.

Software

The software works but it is janky. Device detection can be hit or miss, profiles sometimes do not load, and I have had it randomly close. A lightweight web-based configurator or a more stable desktop app would go a long way. The core settings you need are there, but polish is not.

Pros and Cons

Pros

  • Exceptional accuracy and micro-control for editing and aim training
  • Perfect for smaller hands and claw or fingertip grip styles
  • Ultra light weight without a flimsy shell
  • Strong wireless performance and optional 8K upgrade
  • Great value compared to big-brand flagships
  • Responsive optical main clicks with clean side buttons

Cons

  • Scroll wheel develops a scratchy, metallic feel and sound over time
  • Bottom shell is open and tends to attract hair and dust, and the circular cutouts make it harder to clean out thoroughly
  • Battery indicator on the dongle needs an intermediate warning color
  • No Bluetooth or multi-device switching
  • Included USB-C cable is too stiff to use comfortably, and the port position/recess makes many soft third-party cables not fit properly. A Razer flexible cable, for example, will not seat.

Verdict

If Hitscan fixes the scroll wheel scratch at the source, the Hyperlight becomes the Superlight 2c replacement for people who do not want to fund the Logitech tax. Even with the wheel quirk, it is still one of the best small, ultra-light performance mice you can buy. For me it remains a daily driver because the shape, weight, and accuracy are that good for both my work and my games.

Affiliate link: https://hitscan.com/?ref=TRISTAN
Coupon code: Use code TRISTAN for 5% off at checkout

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