Cooler Master MM712 Sakura Wireless Gaming Mouse Pink|White, Adjustable 19,000 DPI, Palm|Claw Grip, 2.4GHz|Bluetooth, PixArt Optical Sensor, Ultraweave Cable, PTFE Feet, RGB Lighting (MM-712-WWOH2)
Original price was: $49.99.$42.36Current price is: $42.36.
Price: $49.99 - $42.36
(as of Jan 09, 2025 10:49:23 UTC – Details)
The MM712 is the next evolution of our first popular lightweight mouse, leveled up to lightweight prestige. It retains all the same benefits: gaming-grade sensor, hybrid 2.4GHz and Bluetooth 5.1 wireless capability, PTFE feet for unrivaled glide, optical micro switches for near-instant input, and ultraweave cable for minimal snagging. However, it does all this while shedding the shredded chassis, opting instead for a seamless, hole-less profile specially engineered to remain <58g in total weight. Responsive, agile, and tactile, the MM712 truly fills in the gaps of its perforated predecessors..
Hybrid Wireless Tech: Choose from wired mode, 2.4GHz wireless, or Bluetooth 5.1 to connect multiple devices
Seamless Lightweight Design: Honeycomb shell housing has been upgraded to a seamless chassis with ambidextrous shape that still keeps the total weight at 59g
Gaming-Grade Hardware: Pro-grade sensor adjustable up to 19,000 DPI, and optical micro switches rated for 70 million clicks and near-instantaneous input time
Ultraweave Cable: Super lightweight and engineered in-house to prevent cable snag when swiping and unnecessary cable drag when in battle
Pure PTFE Mouse Feet for Superior Glide: New-and-improved feet made with PTFE material for low friction and high durability provides a smooth, fast glide without cable pull
Customers say
Customers appreciate the mouse’s quality, weight, and comfort. They find it lightweight, comfortable, and well-shaped. However, opinions differ on the buttons, build quality, click latency, and battery life.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
10 reviews for Cooler Master MM712 Sakura Wireless Gaming Mouse Pink|White, Adjustable 19,000 DPI, Palm|Claw Grip, 2.4GHz|Bluetooth, PixArt Optical Sensor, Ultraweave Cable, PTFE Feet, RGB Lighting (MM-712-WWOH2)
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Original price was: $49.99.$42.36Current price is: $42.36.
Alex –
Amazing and lightweight
I watched a good bit of reviews on this mouse and I am stunned , all the reviews were good so I thought Iâd give it a try and they were not lying about the weight . The mouse is really light and a bit compact so for larger hands if you donât use claw I wouldnât fully recommend personally but for medium to smaller hands you can utilize any type of grip comfortably. The buttons feel great definitely for the price and the tracking is amazing and quick with the sensor being higher it responded to your wrist better ( more angle ). So for gaming it is also a plus , Iâve played multiple games such as halo infinite , Valorant and Even other games like Chained together and it worked perfectly . It feels durable and is high quality so I highly recommend . Is only 1KHz pulling rate !
R. Allen –
Overall a great little mouse, but hidden screws SUCK!
I have been looking for a good mouse literally for decades. Like choosing a keyboard, choosing the right mouse is very subjective. With a few exceptions, the vast majority of mice produced in the past 20 years have been marketed as a âGaming Mouse.â Usually this means they are manufactured as lightweight as possible, using molds that use as little plastic as possible. Usually this means most mice are less than 70 grams. Far to light for my hands. I need something that has some weight to it.Modern mice are also designed with buttons that have very light activation force which causes a hair trigger response that will false click if you just look at them wrong, and of course they are covered in LEDâs! It is impossible to actually rest your fingers on the mouse buttons without clicking them. Most also try and incorporate as many extra buttons as possible, and the positioning of these extra buttons leaves no space to rest my fingers without causing false clicks. These features are apparently designed for âE-Sportsâ gaming, as they supposedly improve speed and accuracy. I have been a gamer for well over 40 years and these âfeaturesâ do the exact opposite for me!For me, this also makes most of these mice very difficult to use in other software. I have been through numerous varieties of Logitech, SteelSeries, Corsair, Razor, Microsoft and several other brands, all have been a disappointment for one reason or another. The Cooler Master MM310 is as good a mouse as I have found in years, though it does have several of the features mentioned above.I learned how to type on a TRS-80, and stepped up to a IBM Model M a few years later, so my fingers require feedback when I do anything on a computer. One of my biggest issues with mice, especially over the past decade has been switch response and feel. The switches under the buttons on this mouse are Kailh GM 4.0 (60 M), they are still to light for my preference, but they give much better feedback than anything else I have felt for years on a mouse.The mouse wheel encoder is mechanical and gives a good click feedback response. It is acceptable, but again, my personal preference would be for a more solid click feedback. The rubberized coating on the wheel feels quite good. Hopefully that will hold up better than the rubber coating on my previous mouse, a BenQ Zowie S2, that started to degrade after a couple of years and I had to completely replace the mouse wheel using an older Cooler Master mouse as a donor.The optical sensor is nothing special, but preforms quite well with good accuracy. I do also really like the cloth mouse cord, it doesnât interfere with mouse movement at all. The side buttons on this mouse are well designed and leave plenty of space for my thumb to rest comfortably without accidentally causing an unintended click. I have only had the mouse a few days, so I canât really speak to build quality, but so far everything seems to be well designed, with one major exception!There are 3 screws that hold the mouse shells together, the first two are easy to find as they are hidden under the back two glides. There is no screw under the front glide, so donât bother taking that one off! The third is much more tricky to find and I came close to destroying the mouse just trying to take it apart! The third screw is located between the glides at the very back of the mouse under the paper label that covers the holes for the weight reduction on the bottom of the mouse! You can not feel it with your fingers as the holes disguise it. Why manufactures insist on hiding screws is really quite beyond me. I do understand their reasons behind it, I simply disagree with their reasoning completely!There are multiple reasons why mice shells need to be easily disassembled. Dust and debris will still build up inside a mouse and it does need to be cleaned from time to time. The scroll wheel is especially susceptible to this! In my case, I have a set of weights that I saved from an old mouse and I hot glued those into the body to add weight to the mouse. Because I had to remove the glides and punch a screw driver through the paper label, I had to replace the glides and remove the torn parts of the label to make the mouse actually usable for me. I knocked a star off of the review for this inconvenience! If you are looking for a good cheap mouse, it is tough to do better than $18 for this one!
Matias Robledo –
amazing mouse
It looks great, it’s light and minimalist. It moves smoothly and the coolermaster software is intuitive and has a lot of configurations.
E. Hamalainen –
Great on paper, disappointing in person
– Fingertip grip, 90% wrist aimer- DPI around 1800-2200 depending on mouse- Lenovo Legion mouse pad- Current mouse: MM710, gloss black coatingDespite itâs bad build quality, my MM710 is easily my favorite mouse of all time, so the idea of getting a wireless version of that mouse with optical switches made me very excited. Unfortunately, Cooler Master has made a product that appears to be an across the board upgrade on paper, but in hand is actually worse in almost every way.Positives- The build quality is a MASSIVE leap over the MM710 and easily competes with the likes of Logitech or Razer while costing much less.- The weight balance of the mouse feels great. Doesnât feel front or back heavy at all to me.- When waking from sleep, the mouse connects almost instantly. Some wireless mice have issues with this and I appreciate that this one doesnât.- USB C connection. I know itâs becoming the standard, but itâs always nice to see.- The main clicks arenât as mushy as the MM710. Theyâre much more solid and snappy.Negatives- The coating is not nearly as grippy as the glossy coating on my MM710. Itâs difficult for me to maintain a solid grip on the mouse, which means Iâm constantly having to adjust my fingers in order to keep control.- While most people are praising the removal of holes, I actually used the holes on the sides of the mouse to help anchor my fingers, especially my pinky. This meant that I didnât have to exert a lot of force on my fingers to keep them in place. With the solid sides, however, I have to use more force, which causes pain in my wrist in shoulders.- Every button on the mouse is harder to click than on the MM710. Itâs especially bad with the side buttons and the middle mouse click. The MM710 allows me to essentially ârollâ my finger or thumb over these buttons to press them, which makes it easy to quickly use them while maintaining a solid grip. The buttons on the MM712 require so much more force that I have to take my finger off the mouse and solidly press the button. This often results in an uncomfortable shift in my grip that forces me to readjust.- The RGB is pointless and only adds weight to the mouse without any real benefit to the user.Overall, Iâm disappointed in the mouse and will be returning it immediately.
Trevor –
Best mouse I’ve ever used
After switching between several different mice including both the Gpro and Gpro super light this one just reigns above all. So as the title states this is 100% imo the best mouse made. It’s super lightweight, comfortable and best of all not 150 dollars. The white makes the mouse look super clean appesrance wise also. The battery seems to last a long time and doesn’t take very long to charge when dead. It’s not a super big mouse but is a nice size. Buttons are a tactile click I believe.
A Boomer –
Not the lightest mouse, but also fairly light (especially compared to G305). The center of mass is close to the palm which is good. Nice and strong buttons that have a good click. Good tracking, nice RGB, and generally comfortable.I’ve had 2 dead g305, and a wobbly Keychron m3 mini. So far this mouse seems the most reliable and best built out of the ones I’ve had.Edit: Formely 5 stars, now 3 starsI have noticed a strange issue where I can’t press both the middle click and primary/secondary button at the same time. Not sure if it is a software, hardware, or firmware issue. Butt I have updated to the latest firmware.
Victor –
Weight: goodErgonomics: fineClicking: goodBut I’ve had two issues with the mouse for a while.The first is the battery life: it’s bad. It takes a single AA battery and absolutely devours it. My Logitech mouse that I use for work (and which I used previously for everyday personal and gaming use) takes 2 AAs but has a battery life that’s AT LEAST 10 times as long.The second issue is the mouse counterscrolls like no other mouse I’ve ever had. At first I thought maybe this is related to the wireless receiver being too far away or blocked somehow. Nope, moving it to the port directly by where I have my mouse didn’t help.Then I thought maybe when I notice it it’s because of low battery, so I swap out to a new battery. Nope! Fresh battery, counterscroll continues.I finally dig into it online and the issue seems to be related to the wheel encoder. I haven’t taken my mouse apart myself to confirm, but I believe this mouse uses a Kailh encoder. Lots of people online complain about these encoders, and it seems other CoolerMaster mice which use Kailh encoders also have counterscrolling issues.This is an ENORMOUS frustration when it comes to everyday use. Scrolling through a web page is horrible because about 1/3 to 1/2 the time I scroll down, the encoder either doesn’t register anything or registers a scroll UP input. Games which use the mousewheel suffer similar problems when using this mouse.I’ve attached a video demonstrating the issue. In the video I am only scrolling DOWN but you can see the screen jitters when it scrolls down and often scrolls UP, and sometimes even a significant length!These issues combined with the overall not revolutionary design and feel of the mouse make me feel as if I’ve wasted my money. I bought the mouse for $54. That’s too much. The current price DEFINITELY is too much for what you get.
Richard Dannie –
I have tried all the small gaming mice and I always preferred my MM710’s shape. Unfortunately I got a first batch copy of that mouse and experienced many of the well documented build quality issues with it. This mouse fixes pretty much all of them and doesn’t have any holes for better comfort while not adding too much weight. The clicks and mouse scroll wheel are very light compared to all the mice I’ve used so it takes a few days to get used to and its great after that. Crucially there is no wheel issue I had on my MM710 where it would often scroll down when you pushed it up. I wish the coating was the same as the old MM710 and also that the battery life was longer but other than that, this is my end game mouse, those issues are nitpicking.
Juan Andrés Ãvila Ãlvarez –
En general el mause es muy bueno, se nota que le pusieron empeño, la construcción es muy buena, es muy cómodo, es increÃblemente ligero ya que al tener baterÃa integrada no se requiere colocar una que además lo haga más pesado, los materiales se sienten de buena calidad y en general lo he usado para trabajo y para jugar juegos como dead by daylight, call of duty, valorant y se a comportado perfectamente aún jugando con el wireless, no se siente o al menos yo no siento ningún tipo de retraso por lo que es un mause que realmente puedo recomendar tanto para trabajar como para jugar,
Alexis Emanuel Heredia Ceballos –
Tiene un tamaño similar al ya icónico g203 o G pro (1st gen), El bump en este caso es más enfocado hacia la palma lo cual te permite tener un grip decente sin necesidad de adherir los stickers que vienen con el mouse, yo recomiendo este mouse si lo que buscas es un tamaño relacionado a las versiones mini de otras marcas, y tiene una mejora en el sensor que no se presentaba en las ediciones anteriores, sin duda alguna por el precio es una excelente opción si se busca un fingertip grip o claw grip, para palma grip lo veo complicado si la mano es demasiado grande y debido a que el mouse no es de gran tamaño, se limita a solo tomar una media parte de la palma al momento de apoyar.