
SteelSeries Prime Neo Noir
Score: 85/100
Corsair M75 AIR
Score: 87/100Rankings

The Corsair M75 AIR is an ultra-lightweight 59 g wireless mouse delivering 26,000 DPI performance with dual 2.4 GHz and Bluetooth connectivity and up to 100 hours of Bluetooth battery life. It offers fewer programmable buttons and no RGB lighting, which may limit customization for some gamers. Best suited for competitive FPS players who value speed and low weight.

The SteelSeries Prime Neo Noir combines a 69 g ultra-light chassis with a TrueMove Pro sensor and premium Prestige OM switches, adding Prism RGB lighting on the scroll wheel. Its right-handed design and lack of wireless connectivity may deter some users. Best for right-handed competitive gamers who value lightweight precision.
| Attribute | ![]() | ![]() |
|---|---|---|
18,000 | 26,000best | |
| ↓ lower better | 69 g | 59 gbest |
— | 100 hoursbest | |
— | 5best | |
— | 5best | |
— | 2 yearsbest | |
1best | — |
Click an attribute name to sort · Green = best, red = worst (relative to this comparison)
| Attribute | ![]() | ![]() |
|---|---|---|
Performance(1) | ||
Maximum DPI | 18000 | 26000 |
Build & Design(1) | ||
Weight (g) | 69 g | 59 g |
Sensors(1) | ||
Sensor Type | TrueMove Pro | Optical |
Connectivity(2) | ||
Wireless (Yes/No) | false | true |
Connection Type | Wired | 2.4GHz & Bluetooth |


Products in the top-left offer the best value (high score, low price).

Professional reviewers praise the Prime Neo Noir for its esports-grade precision, citing the TrueMove Pro sensor's 1:1 tracking and tilt correction, the ultra-responsive Prestige OM switches, and the ultra-light 69 g chassis that reduces fatigue. They also commend the wired reliability and subtle RGB lighting, while noting the potential downside of the very light weight and the absence of a wireless option.
Everyday users generally appreciate the mouse's smooth, responsive feel, lightweight comfort, and the PTFE feet that glide well even without a mouse pad. Recurring criticisms focus on the 69 g weight being too light for some grip styles, the right-handed only design, lack of wireless connectivity, limited button count, and occasional cable-management issues.
