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🎮 Ultra-light, ultra-ready—game and work without limits!
The Razer Orochi V2 is an ultra-lightweight (60g) wireless gaming mouse designed for professionals and gamers on the move. Featuring dual wireless modes (Bluetooth and HyperSpeed), it offers an industry-leading battery life of up to 950 hours. Equipped with 2nd-gen mechanical switches rated for 60 million clicks and a 5G Advanced 18K DPI optical sensor, it delivers precision and durability in a compact, ambidextrous design. Compatible with AA or AAA batteries, it balances portability with high performance for seamless work and play.











| ASIN | B0916MW7CG |
| Additional Features | Lightweight, Portable, Touch Scroll, Wireless |
| Antenna Location | Gaming |
| Are Batteries Included | Yes |
| Are Batteries Required | Yes |
| Battery Average Life | 687.5 Hours |
| Best Sellers Rank | #75 in Video Games ( See Top 100 in Video Games ) #8 in PC Gaming Mice |
| Brand | Razer |
| Built-In Media | AA battery |
| Button Quantity | 6 |
| Color | White |
| Compatible Devices | Laptop |
| Connectivity Technology | Bluetooth |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 out of 5 stars 5,355 Reviews |
| Enclosure Material | Plastic |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00810056142568 |
| Hand Orientation | Ambidextrous |
| Hardware Platform | PC |
| Item Dimensions L x W | 4.26"L x 2.47"W |
| Item Weight | 2.08 ounces |
| Manufacturer | Razer |
| Mfr Part Number | RZ01-03730400-R3U1 |
| Minimum Required Operating System Version | Windows 10 |
| Model Name | Orochi V2 |
| Model Number | RZ01-03730400-R3U1 |
| Mouse Maximum Sensitivity | 18000 Dots per Inch |
| Movement Detection | Optical |
| Movement Detection Technology | Optical |
| Number of Batteries | 1 Lithium Metal batteries required. (included) |
| Number of Buttons | 6 |
| Operating System | Windows, macOS |
| Power Source | Battery Powered |
| Range | 10.0 meters |
| Special Feature | Lightweight, Portable, Touch Scroll, Wireless |
| Style Name | Modern |
| Theme | Gaming |
| UPC | 810056142568 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
| Warranty Description | 2 year manufacturer |
B**V
Fantastic for gaming and productivity, but missing USB-C rechargeability
I recently purchased the Razer Orochi V2, and overall, it is an amazing mouse. The build quality is absolutely fantastic, and it feels premium. It fits perfectly in my palm, and the materials and clicks have a very pleasant tactile feel. I use it daily for both gaming and work, and it performs flawlessly in both scenarios. Compared to my Razer Pro Click, the Orochi V2 actually fits my hand much better. In fact, I now only use the Pro Click as a backup for when the Orochi's battery suddenly dies! There is really only one downside for me: it runs on disposable batteries rather than having a built-in rechargeable one. On the plus side, it only needs a single battery to operate, and I love the clever design that allows you to use either a standard AA or a smaller AAA battery depending on your weight preference. However, I would really love to see a future version of this exact mouse with a built-in battery and a standard USB Type-C charging port. If you don't mind swapping batteries occasionally, this is a near-perfect mouse. Highly recommended!
G**I
Amazing mouse even for big hands.
So I have big hands and what any big hand gamer understands is that you either have to get a big ol heavy G502 size mouse or use a certain grip to hold all these mice for smaller handed people. I previously owned a Model O, G pro, and Model O wireless. Having big hands my biggest peeve with all the other mice is that they’re ambidextrous mice so they are even harder to hold with fingertip/claw grips because the smooth, near flat, symmetrical sides. I only really make contact with the sides by pinching my fingers with them. I never make contact with the butt or base of the mouse with my grip. There’s where the Orochi changes things The Orochi somehow is a smaller mouse than all of the above but fills out my hand and grip SO much better. The sides actually have slight grooves so I don’t slip off the sides of my mouse and the shorter but bigger hump in the middle makes me for once actually feel the mouse in my palm if I want. Overall the feel is amazing. Battery life varies of course but I can barely tell there’s a battery in the thing even when flicking and the weight and balance of it feel so good. Mobile gaming is the main reason I got this mouse. I like that the dongle stores inside the mouse, uses batteries so I don’t have to worry about keeping it charged or bringing around extra cables to charge it, and the Bluetooth is good for casual gaming but doesn’t do great with big flicks so the 2.4ghz connection is required for esports games. Overall a great mouse and really awesome to game with and a little plus to it is that the shell comes off the back so satisfying, it’s hard to not fidget with it by taking it on and off haha. Well worth the money and I’d expect they’ll make a rechargeable one with all the success this mouse has accrued so far so if the swappable batteries don’t tickle your pickle, I’d just buy a sub $20 rechargeable battery station or just wait for a new rechargeable Orochi to come out.
A**N
Great Quality Little Gaming Mouse
Great little gaming mouse for my laptop. 2 wireless modes is great and the fact that you can use either a AA or AAA battery to power it, is really convenient and cool. I got a great deal on this mouse as it was on sale for 25$ but I don't think I would spend 60$ on it. It's a little short for my hand so clicking is a little awkward but you can expect that for a compact mouse and I have huge hands. Overall though it performs very well, love all of the settings as well. I am an avid Razer customer. I love their stuff and always have.
N**N
Lightweight Fingertip Grip, But Double Click Issues
First some context for how I use this mouse. I do about an hour of aim training every day, and then anywhere from 0-8 hours of FPS gaming per day. Average of probably 2 hours of gaming per day. I have a relaxed fingertip grip, my fingertips usually rest about 1/3 of the way down from the tip of the mouse. This means I usually end up clicking near the back part of the mouse buttons. I also have pretty small hands for my height. The first thing I noticed about this mouse is how dang light it is. It comes with a 15gram AA battery to use with it. There is also a slot for a AAA battery if you want, however that slot is farther back and makes the mouse feel less centered. You can buy adaptors (usually about 3 grams) to fit a AAA lithium battery (usually about 7 grams) into the AA slot if you want, and this would shave about 5 grams off of the weight while still keeping it feeling balanced. I hadn't bought a new mouse for about 5 years, so my old G403 felt like a sack of potatoes compared to using this thing. The mouse skates are also great, nice and wide and completely pure white teflon. The second thing I noticed was the shape. It's obviously a small mouse, and I'm fine with that, but I found that I really disliked the taper on the back of the mouse. Since I have a gripstyle that sits pretty far back on the mouse, I really noticed the lack of control that my pinky now had - I had to curl my pinky in a bit. On my G403, there is a small hump back there that really helped my pinky contribute to my aim. Similarly, it felt like my thumb was contributing slightly less to my aim, although not quite to the same effect as my pinky. Everything mechanically felt great, clicks feel good and the thumb buttons feel good as well. I like the size of the thumb buttons, I wish more people made them "thin" like they are on the Orochi. I barely use the scroll wheel due to the nature of the games I play, so I can't speak to that part of the mouse. In my aim training, I noticed some immediate differences. Tracking was SOOOO much easier. My tracking scores in Kovaak's literally immediately jumped up. This isn't too surprising considering that the Orochi is about 50 grams lighter than my previous mouse was (G403). However, I also had an immediate dip in my static scores. There simply is no stopping power in this mouse, and I had grown used to my G403 having a bit of friction due to weight. This is something that I adapted to over time, and I eventually ended up beating my static high scores with the Orochi after a few weeks. The coating is not great. Or really just the lack of a coating. It's like a textured ABS plastic or something, it's certainly not the most slippery thing in the world, but I would often have to re-adjust my grip after about 15 seconds of very fast tracking that covers large swaths of area. There are grip pads you can use to help with this, but personally I'd rather deal with a mild amount of slipperiness than to put a stick-on grip pad onto my mouse. I found that my grip actually ended up changing mildly because of this, my ring finger ended up resting on the right "edge" of the mouse between the top and the side. This allowed it to have a "hard" edge to grab onto. The DPI button is nicely recessed, so I never had any issues with accidentally clicking it like I've had on other mice. It's still usable if you wanted to do a DPI shift mid game for certain games where that can be advantageous. Never had a single issue with connectivity, but I also keep my mouse dongle in a spot where it should have a great connection to the mouse. The battery life is kind of insane, after 3 months of almost constant use, it still has a nearly full battery. I never really used the mouse in Bluetooth mode, so I can't speak to how that functions. Now with all of the bases covered, time for the biggest issue I had with this mouse: double clicking. My index finger rests to the far right of the left click, almost touching the scroll wheel. After about 3 months of use, I noticed that while holding down left click during tracking scenarios, I would occasionally miss a "beat" of the left click being held down. I thought it was user error, but it kept happening once in a blue moon. The click would be held down, and there would be no mechanical feedback of the click being let go or "reclicked", but it would still blip out for a bit. Then, after a little bit of this, I started to have a much larger issue - I was getting the occasional double click. Again, I thought this might be user error, but there were a couple of situations that made it extremely obvious to me. One such scenario was in Overwatch, where I shot someone as Cassidy and then instantly started channeling my ultimate, but the ultimate instantly got "used" despite me not clicking again. I also noticed it while playing Bloons TD6, where I accidentally bought two upgrades instead of a single one for one of my towers. I started looking into it and used a "double click test" that I found online that shows the latency between clicks, and I found that I could somewhat consistently (about once every 10 tries) replicate the double click situation. You can see this in the picture that I have attached, where I am clicking about every 0.8 seconds, but once there is a second click at about .28 seconds. It seems to be something with the release of the click, like if I click but *EXTREMELY SLIGHTLY* ease the pressure mid-click, the click is still being held down mechanically, but the mouse almost seems to interpret that the click was quickly let go and then re-clicked. I haven't had any issues with the right click. I also didn't have the double-click issue for several months, or if I did it was rare enough that I never noticed it. TLDR: The mouse is extremely light, feels good, slightly awkward shape, is a little slippery, insane battery life, and works well, except mine had a double click issue. If yours doesn't have the same issue, then I would recommend it for fingertip or claw grip.
T**R
Finally found my endgame mouse
Finally found my endgame mouse — perfect for lightweight lovers and RTS gamers. I've gone through a lot of mice over the years — office mice, productivity mice, various gaming mice — and I kept running into the same problem: they were either too heavy or too bulky for my taste. The Orochi V2 is the first mouse where I thought, "this is it." The weight and size are just right if you prefer a light, nimble feel in your hand. It doesn't fatigue your wrist over long sessions, and the compact form factor gives you great control without feeling like you're pushing a brick around your desk. If you play StarCraft 1 or other real-time strategy games that demand fast, precise movements, I genuinely think this is one of the best options you can find on Amazon. The responsiveness and accuracy make a noticeable difference when every click counts. Battery life is also excellent for a wireless mouse, and switching between Bluetooth and the 2.4GHz dongle is seamless. Overall, this is the mouse I keep coming back to — and I don't see myself switching anytime soon.
D**9
So light and so smooth
It is ridiculous how good and light this mouse is for the price. Got it on sale($40) and it was very much worth every penny. Love using it for work and for gaming.
A**N
Very glitchy mouse won't accept clicks, made me reinstall windows
TLDR: Ask ChatGPT about this mouse and it'll tell you that other users have reported issues with this mouse not clicking properly. It will tell you that this is a known issue with this mouse. So I'm an IT expert (programmer, been using PC's since Windows 3.1). And I could not get this mouse to work right. The mouse doesn't work right when the computer goes to sleep, and then wakes from sleep. This problem occurs on Windows 11 pro. When the mouse is connected in Bluetooth mode: First problem is, the mouse will NOT reconnect to the PC when the PC wakes from sleep, unless you have "Show notifications to connect using Swift Pair" disabled in windows Bluetooth settings. But setting is on by default. Second problem is, even with this setting disabled, and even if the mouse successfully reconnects when the computer wakes up, the computer will NOT accept clicks when it wakes up. This mouse apparently drops a phantom click that it never releases. The only way I could find to get rid of that phantom click is by pressing CTRL+ALT+DEL every time the computer wakes. This resets the phantom click and the mouse would function normally. But it's super annoying to have to press CTRL+ALT+DEL every time the PC wakes, especially since this mouse is supposed to be a gift to my little girl, I don't want her to have to deal with it not working perfectly. Also the mouse would sometimes stop accepting clicks even in the middle of playing games, but this only happened rarely in Bluetooth mode. On the wireless USB mode: The mouse cursor is NOT visible when windows first boots. You can't use the mouse to get to the box to type your PIN number to unlock the computer. You must use the keyword to get into windows, and then the cursor appears. This problem doesn't happen when using the mouse in Bluetooth mode, only in the wireless USB mode. And then the phantom click issue is MUCH more frequent in the wireless USB mode, and doesn't require the computer to wake from sleep, but happens randomly even in the middle of playing games... suddenly you can't click anything. And when waking from sleep, or when the mouse "goes to sleep", when it wakes up there's issues with clicks... and sometimes the cursor isn't even visible. Connecting a second mouse: When the computer stops accepting clicks, then even the second mouse would not be able to click. All connected mouses would stop being able to click. But this problem of not being able to click, would ONLY occur if the Razor Orochi V2 mouse was connected to the computer either via Bluetooth or wireless USB. If I disconnected the Orochi V2 mouse, then the problem never happens. So it's definitely this mouses's fault. But initially I didn't realize this mouse was the culprit. Because it affected all connected mice. So I thought, at first, that it was a windows issue... maybe a bad driver I had installed in the past. So I ended up reinstalling windows, trying to fix any potential driver issues. It wasn't until after that, when I discovered that the problem was this mouse all along. I was super upset to have reinstalled windows, and lost all my software and settings, only to then discover that the problem was still there and it was this mouse all along. As for getting my money back, amazon did not offer me an option to return the mouse and get a replacement. It only lets me send it back for a full refund. No option for replacement. So I think I bought this mouse when it was on sale. So it seems like they are expecting me to send it back, and then repurchase it at the new higher price, if I want to try it again. It's possible mine was simply defective. I did every imaginable thing to try to get this mouse to work. The mouse I had was brand new from Razor, but it was running an old firmware. I did a firmware update to version 1.03.00 (it was running version 1.02.00 when it arrived). I can confirm that firmware update did NOT fix the problem with the phantom clicks. I also set all the related devices in my device manager to not go to sleep, including the USB slots. That did NOT fix the problem with the phantom clicks. I also, at the advice of chatGPT, did a bunch of registry edits, none of which fixed the problem. I also, at the advice of chatGPT, wrote my own c# application, which attempted in various ways to force the mouse to release the phantom click, at least when the computer would wake up. I was trying to mimic the behavior of pressing CTRL+ALT+DEL. After many hours of coding, I was unable to programmatically correct the problems with this mouse. I really wanted this mouse to work because it's wireless, and its small, so it fits my daughter's hand. I'm now having to return this mouse at my time and expense, no option for replacement, lost whatever discount I got from the previous sale, and I lost days of my life trying to fix this mouse, and I lost some of my software and settings from the reinstallation of windows, so I have work to do just to get my daughter's computer back to normal again. Terrible experience. Conclusion: Ask ChatGPT about this mouse and it'll tell you that other users have reported issues with this mouse not clicking properly. It will tell you that this is a known issue with this mouse.
T**S
Unleash Your Gaming Potential
The Razer Orochi V2 Mobile Wireless Gaming Mouse is nothing short of a gaming marvel. As a dedicated gamer, I've had the pleasure of using various gaming mice over the years, but the Orochi V2 stands out as a true game-changer. Here's why I can't help but sing its praises: Wireless Freedom: The wireless connectivity of the Orochi V2 is a game-changer. With Razer's HyperSpeed Wireless technology, I experienced zero lag or interruptions during intense gaming sessions. The freedom to move without being tethered by a cable is liberating. Compact and Portable: This mouse is designed with mobility in mind. It's incredibly compact and lightweight, making it perfect for gaming on the go. Whether you're a frequent traveler or just prefer a more minimalist setup, the Orochi V2 is the ideal companion. Exceptional Battery Life: The Orochi V2 boasts impressive battery life. I was pleasantly surprised by how long it lasts on a single charge. It easily survived through extended gaming marathons and even lasted me multiple days of regular use without needing a recharge. Customizable Performance: Razer's customization options are legendary, and the Orochi V2 doesn't disappoint. With the Razer Synapse software, you can fine-tune the mouse's sensitivity, button assignments, and lighting effects to suit your gaming preferences. Versatile Connectivity: The Orochi V2 doesn't limit you to just wireless gaming. It also offers Bluetooth connectivity, allowing you to seamlessly switch between devices. This versatility is a godsend for those who use multiple devices for work and play. Impressive Sensor: The 5G Advanced Optical Sensor delivers precise tracking and accuracy. Whether you're engaged in fast-paced FPS battles or navigating intricate RPG menus, the Orochi V2 responds flawlessly to your movements. Comfortable Design: Despite its compact size, the Orochi V2 is surprisingly comfortable to use. It's designed to fit various grip styles, and the textured side grips ensure a secure hold during intense gaming moments. In conclusion, the Razer Orochi V2 Mobile Wireless Gaming Mouse is a true gem for gamers who value performance, mobility, and customization. Its wireless capabilities, exceptional battery life, and versatility make it a standout choice for both casual and competitive gamers. Razer's commitment to quality and innovation is evident in every aspect of this mouse. If you're in the market for a compact and powerful gaming mouse that can keep up with your gaming lifestyle, the Orochi V2 should be at the top of your list. It has certainly elevated my gaming experience, and I couldn't be happier with this exceptional piece of gaming hardware.
V**N
Razer Orichi
Good mouse for use with MacBook Pro. Daughter loves it.
S**Y
Su diseño adecuado y durabilidad en su batería excelente
Funcional suave manejo y excelente calidad
K**A
Es precioso me encanta
Lo compré hace ya tiempo, es demasiado lindo me encanta porque tiene dos compartimentos para pilas una doble a y otra triple a, ojo solo puedes meter una a la vez
R**P
Perfect 👍
Great mouse, nice clicky mouse, additional keys are a must have. Once you start using it then can't work without it
F**D
After 2 Years — Still an Amazing Mouse!
I’ve been using the Razer Orochi V2 for over two years, and it’s honestly one of the best lightweight wireless mice I’ve ever owned. The battery life is ok.. . It’s comfortable, compact, and easy to carry, especially for travel or laptop setups. Even after all this time, it still looks great and performs flawlessly. Truly worth every riyal — a long-lasting, reliable mouse! 🖱️💪
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