Quick Answer
For Warzone, a lightweight 60-70g wireless mouse with a clean sensor and a comfortable grip suits the long battle-royale rounds. The Logitech G Pro X Superlight 2 (near R2,800), Razer DeathAdder V3 Pro (near R3,000) and value Logitech G305 (near R900) all handle Warzone's mix of long-range tracking and close flicks.
What Warzone Demands From a Mouse
Warzone mixes long-range tracking with sudden close-quarters flicks, so you want accurate tracking and a comfortable shape for 30-minute rounds. A light shell around 60-70g reduces fatigue during sustained play, and a flagship sensor handles a typical 400-800 DPI. Two side buttons help bind ping, plates and tactical gear. Pair the mouse with a strong build, for example a Ryzen 7 7700X and RTX 4070-class GPU, to push high frame rates that make tracking smoother.
Picks and a Suggested Sensitivity
The Logitech G305 near R900 is the budget standout. The DeathAdder V3 Pro near R3,000 (about 63g) suits palm grippers with its ergonomic shape, while the G Pro X Superlight 2 near R2,800 (about 60g) fits a range of grips. A common Warzone starting point is 800 DPI with in-game sensitivity around 5-7, giving roughly 25-35cm per 360 for steady tracking; adjust from there to taste.
FAQ
What is a good Warzone mouse sensitivity?
A common starting point is 800 DPI with in-game sensitivity around 5-7, giving about 25-35cm per 360. Adjust until long-range tracking feels controlled.
Is a wireless mouse fine for Warzone?
Yes. Modern wireless mice like the DeathAdder V3 Pro have no perceptible latency and remove cable drag, which helps during long rounds.
What weight suits Warzone?
Around 60-70g balances low fatigue with a stable feel for long-range tracking. Ultralight shells suit pure flick games more; Warzone rewards control.
Start at 800 DPI with mid in-game sensitivity, pick a comfortable 60-70g mouse at Evetech, and tune until your Warzone tracking feels locked in.