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Glorious Series 2 Pro review: A compact and ultralight gaming mouse

With a weight of just 55g and packing 8kHz wireless polling as standard, the Glorious Series 2 Pro is a mini powerhouse of a gaming mouse.

glorious series 2 pro with box

Our Verdict

With 8kHz polling as standard (no extra dongle required), and generally excellent performance, the Glorious Series 2 Pro is a very capable wireless gaming mouse. It's also very light and offers decent value compared to direct competitors. Its main switches are quite stiff and loud, though. It's also very small and doesn't have particularly grippy sides, so it won't suit all users.

Reasons to buy
  • Fantastic overall performance
  • Reasonable value for 8kHz mouse
  • Clean, simple design
  • Comfortable shape
Reasons to avoid
  • Loud and stiff main buttons
  • Not very grippy surface
  • Scroll wheel notches are quite smooth

The Glorious Series 2 Pro is the latest addition to the company’s roster of gaming mice, and it packs in loads of the latest top-tier gaming features, including a wireless and wired polling rate of up to 8kHz, optical switches, and a 26K DPI sensor. It’s a very small and light mouse, with a plain design that’s entirely focused on peak performance, so it should be an ideal choice for competitive PC gamers.

With specs clearly worthy of a spot on our best gaming mouse guide, this new Glorious mouse is up against stiff competition, but a reasonably competitive launch price helps it considerably. Read on to find out all the juicy details.

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Specs

Glorious Series 2 Pro specs
Sensor BAMF 26K optical
Buttons 6
DPI 100-26,000
Weight 55g
Connections USB-C, 2.4GHz wireless
Polling rate Up to 8kHz

Design

The Glorious Series 2 Pro is a very compact mouse, with a length of just 119mm, a height of 38mm, and a width of 52mm. It also weighs just 55g, making it among the lightest wireless gaming mice around. A host of our other top choices of relatively lightweight and wireless gaming mice weigh more, with the likes of the Corsair M75 Air and Logitech G Pro X Superlight 2 weighing 60g, while the Razer Viper V3 Hyperspeed is a relative heavyweight at 82g.

glorious series 2 pro top down shape

Like all the above mice, the Series 2 Pro has a symmetrical shape but with only side buttons on the left side, so it’s not truly ambidextrous. Still, it makes for a comfortable hold. Despite being such a small mouse, I found my 20cm long hands (wrist to middle fingertip) felt comfortable using this mouse with a fingertip grip, and it even sort of works for a palm grip and claw grip.

Regardless of grip style, the surface finish of the mouse isn’t my favorite, with it sporting a plain semi-rough textured plastic, with no grippy, soft-touch coatings or layers of rubber on the sides. This made the sides feel a touch slippery, particularly in colder, drier conditions.

glorious series 2 pro side shape

In terms of styling, the plain black finish and symmetrical shape is very smart. It’s both unassuming yet serious, with Glorious even keeping its logo and model name in tiny lettering on the right side, so you don’t see it when using the mouse right-handed.

Features

There’s some serious core hardware packed into this mouse, but externally it’s as simple as most performance-oriented gaming mice – it’s not designed to be an alternative to the Logitech G502 X Plus. You get just six main buttons, with the left and right buttons joined by two side buttons, and the scroll wheel clicks too.

Finally, the one extra you get that the likes of the Corsair M75 Air omit is a small button just behind the scroll wheel. As is most common, this tiny button is, by default, for switching DPI levels, but all the buttons can be reprogrammed using Glorious’ Core software.

glorious series 2 pro with USB dongle

Flip over the mouse and there’s a power switch, along with a light that will change color to match your assigned DPI levels in the software. You can assign up to six levels in total. You’ll also find four relatively small pure white PTFE glide pads here that as usual, but unlike the Endgame Gear OP1 8K, cover the screws for taking the mouse apart.

Up front is a USB-C socket for charging the mouse and running it via a wired connection. This has a uniquely shaped housing around it so the matching USB-C cable is held securely, but a handful of other USB-C cables we tried fit too, so you shouldn’t have any issues finding a spare if you lose the original or damage it.

glorious series 2 pro underneath sensor

As for wireless, Glorious includes its all-important 8kHz wireless dongle with this mouse. Some wireless gaming mice have been supplying their 4kHz and 8kHz dongles separately as an upgrade to standard 1kHz options, but not here. Notably, though, this dongle is quite large, so if you’re used to having your mouse dongle basically permanently attached to your laptop, you’ll have to think again.

There’s also a lightweight, flexible, and reasonably kink-free cable included in the box, which provides minimal push back and general disruption to your mousing when you do need to plug in.

As for those powerful innards, under the main left and right buttons are optical switches, the brand of which Glorious doesn’t specify. They are, however, rated to have a life of a huge 100 million presses, which is right up there with the longest-lasting switches. They’re optical too, which ensures you don’t have to wait for a debounce delay, as on normal mechanical switches, so there are a few milliseconds shaved off the response of the buttons.

glorious series 2 pro glorious core software profiles

Software

Despite this, there is actually a debounce settings section for this mouse in Glorious’ software. You can set different delays for pressing and releasing the buttons, which some users like to play around with. The default settings have a 0ms click delay but a 10ms release delay, which in theory helps prevent accidental micro-releases of a button.

In this section of the software you can also select the polling rate – from 125Hz to 8000Hz – and lift off distance of either 1mm or 2mm. There’s also a Motion Sync setting, which is an option that has the mouse’s polling rate match the sensor output speed.

glorious series 2 pro glorious core software settings

As for the sensor, it’s called the Glorious BAMF 2.0 and boasts up to a 26,000 DPI level, with the ability to track accurately at up to 650 inches per second movement speed and 50G of movement acceleration. Technically, the likes of the Logitech G Pro X Superlight 2 Dex can top these figures but they’re essentially as good as needed.

glorious series 2 pro glorious core software dpi

Performance

In our tests, performing multiple aim training runs, playing games such as Apex Legends and Fortnite, and using the mouse as a daily work driver for several days, I found the sensor tracking to be as flawless as I’ve come to expect from modern gaming mice. Few ever trip up in a meaningful way these days and the Series 2 Pro is no exception.

I could just about detect the higher polling rate using the mouse on 240Hz and higher screens, with up to around 2-4kHz providing an extra smoothness I could perceive. The jump up to 8kHz did elude my perception, though. What’s more, the 4kHz and 8kHz settings noticeably increased CPU load, with me noticing CPU load peaks of around 16% on the desktop when moving the mouse quickly at 8kHz. This drops to around 12% for 4kHz and around 6-7% at polling rates of 1kHz or lower.

glorious series 2 pro with cable

We’ve seen this CPU load manifest as stuttering in games before, though didn’t specifically experience it on this occasion. Still, the 8kHz option is there if you want to get peak smoothness in certain gaming scenarios. It’s also available over both wired or wireless connections, with separate settings available for each connection in the software.

As for those optical switches, I wasn’t entirely won over. They have a particularly strong initial break point that felt like it made for more effort to press the button in a rapid fire fashion. It also results in a very hollow, thwacking noise as compared to the light click of many other gaming mice switches. The performance is there but the extra click effort and sound didn’t suit my taste.

Another feature that isn’t to my taste is the scroll wheel. It has quite soft, rounded notches/detents and a low-resistance motion as you turn it. This makes for a smooth feel but it doesn’t feel as precise for accurate control of in-game features such as weapon switching, as compared to some other mice.

Price

The Glorious Series 2 Pro price is $119.99, which is reasonably expensive but in the same ballpark, and in fact cheaper than, many other top-tier ultralight wireless mice. The main competing options from Logitech and Razer are north of $150 and they don’t all include 8kHz polling like this mouse.

Verdict

The Glorious Series 2 Pro is fantastic small, lightweight, wireless gaming mouse. Its shape is comfortable, its performance is top-tier, it’s incredibly light, and it offers decent value. It’s not my personal favorite for the surface feel, and scroll wheel feel, as well as the feel and sound of its buttons, but these can be highly subjective factors. If you’re looking for a very lightweight gaming mouse, the Glorious Series Pro 2 is a superb option.

Alternatives

Logitech G Pro X Superlight 2

Logitech’s Superlight 2 offers a similar symmetrical design to the Glorious Series 2 pro but with a slightly larger, more rounded form. It’s also available in a simply fantastic pink color. It’s a more expensive option, though, despite being limited to 1kHz polling.

Read our full Logitech G Pro X Superlight 2 review for more information.

Corsair M75 Air

Although it lacks higher than 1kHz polling, the Corsair M75 Air is still an excellent performer with a very light 60g symmetrical design that, right now, is more affordable than the Glorious at just $79.99 (though it launched at a far higher $149.99).

Read our full Corsair M75 Air review for more information.