
The Logitech PRO X SUPERLIGHT 2c is one of those rare “spin-off” mice that actually earns its spot in the lineup instead of feeling like a lazy reskin. It takes the blueprint of one of the most popular esports mice ever and shrinks it down for players who always felt the original was just a bit too big, without gutting the performance that made pros trust it on stage.
At first glance, the SUPERLIGHT 2c looks exactly like you would expect from Logitech’s pro line – it’s understated, clean, and built for a purpose. No RGB strips are screaming for attention, no weird cutouts, just a smooth shell and a shape that’s clearly tuned for competitive play.
Logitech PRO X SUPERLIGHT 2c specs and price

| Dimensions (L × W × H) | 118.4 × 61.4 × 38.5 mm |
| Weight | 51 g |
| Buttons | 5 buttons (Left and Right click, scroll click, 2 side buttons). |
| Sensor | HERO 2 optical sensor. |
| DPI range | 100 – 44,000 DPI (adjustable in software) |
| Polling Rate | 1,000 Hz standard and up to 8,000 Hz |
| Colors | Black, White, Pink |
| Price | $149.99 |
Built for fast hands and tighter grips
The big twist is in the name, as the “c” stands for compact, and that change is noticeable as soon as you pick it up. The hardware trims down the dimensions of the regular Superlight 2, making it a better fit for players with smaller hands or anyone who leans into claw and fingertip grips.
If the original GPX or Superlight 2 ever felt a bit long or bulky to you, this version finally hits that sweet spot where your fingers naturally land in place, and you are not stretching to reach the clicks.
The coating is the same grippy, matte finish Logitech has been using on the Superlight line, and it does a good job of staying in your hand even when things get sweaty. There is no flex or creak in the shell, which is impressive given how aggressively Logitech is cutting weight here.
Overall comfort will still depend on your hand size, but if you prefer a claw or fingertip grip, this is one of the most comfortable shapes Logitech has shipped in years.

Feels ‘Superlight’ with snappy clicks
The 2c is a featherweight wireless mouse, weighing in around the low 50g bracket, and you can start noticing that immediately when you start taking fast flicks.
There is very little inertia as the mouse stops exactly where you want it to, which I found is huge for handling tacky angle fights in VALORANT or pixel adjustments in CS2.
The clicks use Logitech’s LIGHTFORCE hybrid optical-mechanical switches, the same family that appeared in the Superlight 2 and other recent G-series gear. Practically, they feel sharp and snappy, making repeated taps or counter-strafes feel controlled rather than mushy.
The trade-off is that they are a bit louder and “crisper” than older GPX-style clicks, and that can be a love-or-hate thing depending on how sensitive you are to sound.
The scroll wheel is familiar Logitech territory, with defined steps, does not feel too stiff, but not overly loose at the same time. It’s fine for weapon swapping and bunny hopping, and it never becomes a distraction.
Side buttons are placed in a comfortable, easy-to-hit zone for forward and back binds, without sticking out so far that you trigger them by accident mid-fight.

Sensor, wireless, and performance
Under the hood, the PRO X SUPERLIGHT 2c uses Logitech’s HERO 2 sensor with a 100 to 44,000 DPI range, 88 G acceleration ceiling, and tracking up to 888 IPS on the right surface. Although nobody actually plays at 44K DPI, that headroom is a good indicator of how stable and accurate the tracking is at realistic sensitivities.
Where it really matters for competitive play is latency and polling. With LIGHTSPEED wireless and support for up to an 8,000 Hz report rate (when paired with compatible gear), the 2c is in that top tier of mice where input delay basically stops being a talking point.
Under crosshair, flicks feel immediate, and micro-corrections land exactly where you expect. If you are coming from a 1,000 Hz wireless mouse, the difference is not “suddenly you are a pro,” but aiming feels more locked in and responsive during chaotic fights.
In real matches across shooters, this all translates into a mouse that stays out of your head. You stop thinking about whether your sensor is spinning out or whether wireless is dropping input, because it just does not. That mental freedom is a big part of why pros lean on Logitech in the first place.

A battery that keeps up with your scrims and pub queues
Battery life is another strong point. Logitech rates the 2c at up to 95 hours of constant motion on a single charge, and that number checks out across early reviews and hands-on impressions. You can check the remaining charge from Logitech’s G Hub app.
For most players, that means you will charge this once a week at most, even if you are putting in serious hours every night.
Charging is done over USB-C, and the cable is light enough to game on while plugged in. However, given the battery life and optional POWERPLAY compatibility, you probably won’t need to. If you already have a POWERPLAY mat, dropping the 2c into that ecosystem gives you effectively infinite wireless uptime, which is a big quality-of-life win for grind-heavy players.
In my case, I have a control-type mousepad from Zowie, and I feel that having the additional skates on is more effective, especially in sweaty Black Ops 7 multiplayer lobbies.
Onboard memory lets you save your DPI stages and polling rate, so you are not constantly fighting software every time you swap PCs. Logitech G Hub is still the command center for deeper customization, but for most FPS players, this comes down to setting one or two DPI values, a polling rate, and maybe a side button macro, then forgetting about it.

It’s not one size fits all
The PRO X SUPERLIGHT 2c still sits in the premium bracket, and for many players, the performance gains over cheaper, well-tuned mice will not justify the cost. If you are not pushing into higher ranks, you might be better off dropping your money on a solid mid-range mouse and a good pad. Then come the buttons.
This is a five-button mouse with primary clicks, a scroll wheel, and two side buttons. If you’re purely into FPS, this one sits right at the sweet spot, but it’s not built for MMO keybind madness or players who want half their utility mapped to their thumb. If you split time between shooters and hotkey-heavy games, you might need a separate mouse or a compromise pick.
Finally, the small size that makes the 2c shine for claw and fingertip users can work against you if you are used to a full palm grip on a larger shell. It’s not tiny or toy-like, but it’s clearly targeted, and that specialization is both its biggest strength and its main limitation.
Verdict

The Logitech PRO X SUPERLIGHT 2c is not trying to be a mouse for everyone. It’s a tournament-grade weapon aimed mainly at players who live in FPS lobbies and want a device that supports high-end mechanics without getting in the way.
If you have smaller hands, prefer claw or fingertip, and want a wireless mouse that you can trust in high-pressure matches, the 2c is the one you absolutely need.
Between the HERO 2 sensor, LIGHTSPEED wireless, long battery life, and refined compact shell, it delivers the kind of consistency that lets you focus on crosshair placement, not your gear.
For everyone else, especially if you already own the regular Superlight 2 or a recent high-end competitor, the upgrade case is less clear. The 2c is an excellent mouse, but it’s also a specialized one. If it matches your hand and playstyle, it feels like it was built just for you. If it does not, you are better off staying with the shape that helps you win more fights.
- Compact, safe shape catering to smaller hands and claw or fingertip players
- Extremely lightweight for fast flicks
- Long battery life
- USB-C charging
- Clean design
- Solid build quality
- Tournament-grade tracking and latency
- Premium price tag
- Limited to five buttons
- Not ideal for larger hands or full palm grip players