

🖱️ Elevate your workspace with precision and power — because your productivity deserves the best!
The Razer Pro Click Humanscale Wireless Mouse combines ergonomic comfort with advanced 5G optical tracking and multi-host Bluetooth connectivity, supporting up to 4 devices. Featuring 8 programmable buttons and an extended battery life of up to 400 hours, it’s designed for professionals who demand precision and seamless multitasking in a sleek, ambidextrous form factor.








| ASIN | B08BQXL6DD |
| Additional Features | Not_Performance_Used |
| Antenna Location | Office |
| Are Batteries Included | Yes |
| Are Batteries Required | Yes |
| Battery Average Life | 400 Hours |
| Best Sellers Rank | #1,138 in Computer Mice |
| Brand | Razer |
| Button Quantity | 8 |
| Color | White |
| Compatible Devices | Laptop, Mac |
| Connectivity Technology | Bluetooth |
| Customer Reviews | 3.7 out of 5 stars 929 Reviews |
| Enclosure Material | PTFE |
| Hand Orientation | Ambidextrous |
| Hardware Platform | PC |
| Item Dimensions L x W | 4.99"L x 3.14"W |
| Item Type Name | Mouse |
| Item Weight | 0.33 Pounds |
| Manufacturer | Razer |
| Model Name | Razer Pro Click |
| Model Number | RZ01-02990100-R3U1 |
| Mouse Maximum Sensitivity | 16000 Dots per Inch |
| Movement Detection | Optical |
| Movement Detection Technology | Optical |
| Number of Batteries | 1 Lithium Ion batteries required. (included) |
| Number of Buttons | 8 |
| Operating System | Windows 10 |
| Power Source | Battery Powered |
| Range | 10.0 meters |
| Special Feature | Not_Performance_Used |
| Style Name | Music |
| UPC | 811659035608 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
| Warranty Description | 2 Year Manufacturer |
R**5
A good product that still lacks compared to same priced competitor.
So you are a gamer who also works from home and must use more than one computer daily. But you don't want a collection of mouse and keyboards at your desk. What is there to do? If you're like me, you went to the Logitech MX Master collection (and they offer other multi-device peripherals outside of that). But any serious gaming enthusiast will not like the membrane keyboard nor the relatively high latency of the Logitech MX peripherals. Enter Razer Productivity series. Multi-device support? Check. Mechanical keyboards? Check. Low latency, high polling rate mice? Check. RGB? Nope. But for some, having two Razer items that aren't #ChromaEverything is ok. Such was the case for me, or so I thought. Admittedly, I am not Razer's target audience as a Mac OS and Windows user. Or so I thought until they started marketing their Mercury Thunderbolt 3 dock as a Mac product... so maybe that's changing. But at any rate, this is the crux of a severe functionality gap between Razer and Logitech's identically priced mouse. With Logitech, I have true cross platform functionality, being able to remap and reprogram ever one of the buttons in both Windows 10 and Mac OS. It will even travel from screen to screen without pushing a button on either device (something Razer requires in their multi-device support). On the Razer Pro Click, you can do full remapping, but only on Windows Devices, and with the Productivity Dongle plugged into a USB port. The Logitech device supports it fully over Bluetooth. Big missed opportunity on both platform support and implementation of the features. On Mac OS, the side buttons are useless. The left and right clicks on the scroll wheel are useless. You can't do free scrolling as you can with Logitech. Only notched scrolling, and slowly. If you are a Windows user only, and just want mouse and keyboard to support your gaming and work computers, this may be fine. But it's a big miss nonetheless, as even Windows only users will find more customization in Logitech Options than Razer Synapse as it pertains to items such as the scroll wheel functions. Another problem with this compared to both Logitech and Razer’s own lineup is lack of unifying keyboards and mouse to one HyperSpeed receiver. Yes. This has it. It’s just not like the gaming variants (or Razer’s own future productivity variants) in being able to combine mouse and keyboard on one USB. To do that, you must get the Click Mini, which has disposable batteries (eWaste), smaller form factor (impossible to do ergonomic palm grip for any hand size beyond a child), and is heavier. The same mini mouse also offers the free scrolling this lacks. It makes no sense that Razer wouldn’t have identical feature sets across their productivity lineup nor the lack of backwards compatibility. For a mouse that’s more expensive and a year older. Razer stuff I guess. As a productivity product, this is lacking with such stiff competition from Logitech, but these shortcomings are addressed by it’s cheaper successor. As a gaming product, it's fine, but Razer offers many mice that are great at gaming with more options (such as RGB if you wanted). So it feels like this is a mouse that's good at productivity and good at gaming, but great at neither. All that to say, I returned this, and got a Pro Click Mini. At over $200 for the Pro Type Ultra and the Pro Click Mini, unless you’re a gamer and working professional in the same space, you’ll likely prefer other cheaper options. Your mileage may vary, and your experience may be better if you're not like me needing Mac OS and Windows support and full customization for every device you use.
L**E
Broken twice inside of 2 years
I wish I could be writing a better review of this mouse, because I actually really liked it. The ergonomics of it are fantastic, and I really enjoyed using it until it decided to stop working. The first issue I had with it was it going completely non-responsive. I tried rebooting, charging, directly connecting, and resetting it. I researched it, and found out it is a common issue with these, and the only fix is to disassemble the mouse, and reset it by unplugging the battery. I'd be giving it a better review if that was the only issue I had with it. But a few months after I got it working again, the scroll wheel started having issues. It was smooth scrolling intermittently, without sending any signal to the computer. I tried cleaning the wheel, and disassembling/reassembling again, but nothing seemed to fix the issue. In the end, I trashed it because it was seeming more and more like a lost cause. Overall a really disappointing product. For the amount of money I spent on it, I would expect to get more than a year and a half of use out of it. The mouse feels great, but the build quality and longevity is severely lacking.
M**L
Not perfect for work use, but feels fantastic.
This mouse feels as good as it looks to hold and use. I like how seamlessly you can transition from one connection method to the next. I love the little stylized cord you can plug in and it becomes flush with the mouse sides... that said, the scroll wheel is clicky only; good for games, not really work. There is some sort of 'sleep' delay if I don't move the mouse for 5 or so minutes; it takes a few seconds for it to come online. The battery needs charging maybe once a week, but that's pennies and you can do it during use. All in all, love this mouse, I can use it all day for work and still want to take it back to my gaming rig. It's a bit light, but oh so comfy. However, the flaws I mentioned make me question that price tag.
B**S
comfortable mouse
The mouse feels great to use, good shape and very comfortable to hold Clicks are satisfying, and scroll wheel is fine, but this product could really use an update to add a free scrolling mode like offered by the logitec mx master It feels less fatiguing to use than the mx master due to it's lighter weight (and IMO the shape is also more comfortable). I've been using the mouse with bluetooth on my work laptop and haven't had any connectivity issues Docked a star for the bizarre choice to use a proprietary USB connector. This should have been a regular USB-C connector. NOTE: For those experiencing issues where the mouse suddenly stops working, make sure that you've updated the firmware (and if you already have the latest firmware, try toggling the switch on the bottom). The changelog for firmware version Firmware v1.02.00_r1 mentions a fix for an issue where the mouse gets stuck in sleep mode, which sounds a lot like the 'suddenly stopped working' issue many reviews mention: "Enable mouse recovery when stuck in sleep or DFU mode by toggling switch from “OFF” to “2.4GHz” or “Bluetooth” And I can confirm that, as of 2025, my mouse shipped with an older firmware version (version 1.0.1) despite the above firmware update being from 2021...
S**E
Very nice mouse!
I think this is a very specific niche, but those who are looking for it it’s a perfect fit. It’s not as ergonomic or premium as an MX Master, and not as good for gaming as one of the Logitech G series. It’s a very nice looking work mouse that’s nice for long periods of time and can be used as a good, not amazing, gaming mouse. If you’re sick of the MX Master’s latency and choppiness, but still want it to look good then this is likely the perfect mouse for that middle ground work meets gaming.
B**Y
Delivers wonderful performance on M1 Macs where Logitech's MX Master 3S could not
This is my first mouse from Razer. For a long time I've honestly been put off by the whole "gamer" aesthetic of most Razer products (even though I do play games myself). Unfortunately after constant struggles with the Logitech MX Master 3S and terrible lagging/stuttering I found myself looking toward non Logitech mice. The Logi Bolt receiver for whatever reason just did not work with any of my macs (M1 Mac Mini, M1 MacBook Air, M1 Pro MacBook Pro for work). All would exhibit absolutely terrible stuttering where I'd have to turn the mouse on and off. I explored all kinds of interference. It would happen with the receiver on a USB 2.0 extension cable with the receiver 3 inches from the mouse with all other Bluetooth, Wifi access points, and any other possible sources of interference removed. There was just something about the way the Logitech mouse that disagreed with how MacOS processed the input. Not really sure what to say. Google says that this issue is not unique to me and my setup, but rather a widespread issue (maybe isolated to M1 and new macs??). Anyhow... I've found myself purchasing the Razer Pro Click mouse. First off I was surprised how much better it felt in my hand compared to the Master 3S, I was not expecting that. Once I plugged in the mouse using the USB cable to my Mac I was in heaven. The tracking was absolutely perfect, insanely responsive. Initially it was too sensitive for me, but that was easy to correct by toggling through the different DPI settings using the button below the scroll wheel. Now obviously plugging the mouse in via USB would have great performance... no wireless at play here (a very nice feature not provided by Logitech, the MX Master 3S would only charge over USB). Stepping over to the included 2.4Ghz receiver I found performance to feel pretty much identical to using the mouse wired. I've now been using the mouse for about a week and I've not had a single issue with performance at all. It has been rock solid. I've also used the mouse in a few rounds of Call of Duty connected to my xbox and it's been fantastic there as well. The only thing for some to be aware of in using this mouse on macOS is that Razer does not provide any software for Mac users. What you get out of the box on the mouse is all you get. That said, I've gone ahead and started using a mac app call SteerMouse which allows for a great deal of customization on the mouse. They seem to integrate with the mouse's on board memory allowing me to change what any button does (even the DPI switcher). I've gone ahead and changed the DPI button to trigger Mission Control and instead I can switch DPI if holding CMD while hitting the button. Works perfect. I suspect SteerMouse is considerably better than whatever Razer would have provided, so I'm ok with the lack of true Mac support. All in all, I've been really surprised by this mouse. I'm very happy with my purchase. Really my only true issue with the mouse has to do with the USB cable. 1) Micro USB??? What year is this? and 2) The USB cable has a custom casing that slides in to the mouse making it so only this cable can be used instead of any old Micro USB cable. That is gross. That said, those issues don't negatively impact the performance of the mouse in any way and I'm still going to give this purchase five stars. I'm surprised how much I love this mouse and it has driven me to write this review (which may or may not be my first Amazon review ever... I can't really recall)
T**S
Poor quality control, product locked up and stopped working after a few days of use
This is the second mouse I bought from Razer. The first was a Razer Pro Click Mini, which I bought to use with a Razer Pro Type Ultra keyboard. The reason I bought the Mini was because it is able to share an RF transmitter with the Pro Type Ultra -- at least that's the claim. In fact, when I used a single RF transmitter, the keyboard lost its connection multiple times per hour, making the completely unusable. After going through troubleshooting with Razer support, I was informed that I had received a defective device. Since the keyboard seemed to work with a separate transmitter, I decided to exchange the Pro Click Mini for a regular Pro Click. That required using two RF transmitters, but sharing a single transmitter didn't work anyway. The Razer Pro Click was great for a few days, until it suddenly stopped working for no reason. After a reboot of my PC, the mouse refuses to connect. The transmitter appears in the device manager, and the driver for the transmitter successfully loads and unloads when I plug it in and unplug it, so the problem is with the mouse. The LED on the bottom simply blinks white continuously, and the power switch does nothing. Whether in Bluetooth mode, RF mode, connected with the cable, or off, the mouse does nothing and the LED continues to blink white. The manual has no reset instructions and after reading online Razer forums, I discovered that this is a common problem, and that others have disassembled the mouse to disconnect/reconnect the internal battery, in order to reset it. I have no wish to disassemble this mouse and disconnect/reconnect the battery just to make it functional. Doing that might even void the warranty, which would be a problem the next time something fails with this poor-quality device. After a dismal end user experience, I am returning the Razer Pro Click mouse and the Razer Pro Type Ultra keyboard. I will not buy another product made by Razer.
K**G
Pretty Great Mouse but Unreliable and Razer's Customer Service is Very Frustrating to Deal With
It's hard to write reviews for things that you like because even though I'm giving this mouse 2-stars, if it was still working I would be giving it 4-5 stars. PROS 1. Very light 2. Good tracking on various surfaces and great design 3. Adjustable sensitivity 4. Great styling 5. Great ergonomics CONS 1. Unreliable. stopped working spontaneously after just a couple of months (and yes I tried switching computers, switching from Bluetooth to 2.4Ghz, trying it wired, charging with a different wall dongle, etc.). I've owned at least 6 different Logitech and Microsoft wireless mice over 2 decades and have never had a mouse die on me. 2. Painfully slow customer support. It took more than a week to star the RMA process (they kept asking for me to try things over again and their e-mail reply speed was usually only once a day.) Now it's a month after my mouse died and appears that my product is lost in shipping (or stalled in shipping) so I'm up a creek without a paddle. 3. Micro-USB charging port - this thing came out in 2020, why isn't it USB-C like everything else?! 4.. Non-user replaceable battery. Planned obsolescence at its best. 5. Bluetooth connection not quite as reliable as I was hoping. Not sure whether to blame Windows 10 or Razer.
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