Cooler Master MM712 Review 1

Cooler Master MM712 Review

Shape & Dimensions »

Packaging


Aside from the mouse, one finds a charging cable (USB Type-A to Type-C), wireless extender, wireless dongle, set of grip tape, and quick start guide inside the compact box.

Weight


My scale shows around 57 g (+/- 1 g), which is slightly less than the weight cited by Cooler Master. Whereas the MM711 weighed 58 g while being wired, having RGB lighting, and plenty of holes, the MM712 achieves a similar weight with a solid shell and being wireless. A competitor such as the Pulsar X2 Mini, for instance, weighs slightly less at 54 g, but has to do without large parts of the bottom plate and no RGB. An excellent weight overall.

Cable


The MM712 comes with a paracord-like, braided charging cable (USB Type-A to Type-C). There is no anchor at the mouse-end of the cable, so the cable may come loose during use, although this is unlikely, given how tight it fits. In terms of flexibility, it is on par with that of the MM731, which is among the most flexible charging cables. Accordingly, the MM712 can be used as if it were a wired mouse with barely if any perceivable difference in terms of handling compared to an exclusively wired mouse. The measured cable length is 1.80 m.

The charging cable also functions as an extension cable if used in conjunction with the wireless extender. The wireless extender can be used to keep the distance between dongle and mouse as short as possible. A storage compartment for the wireless dongle is located on the underside of the mouse.

Feet


The feet on the MM712 are white-dyed pure PTFE (Teflon) feet with slightly rounded edges. Glide is very good and thickness average. The ring around the sensor ensures CPI stays consistent upon applying vertical pressure.
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Dec 22nd, 2024 14:47 EST change timezone

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