Packaging
Aside from the mouse, one finds a USB Type-C to Type-A charging cable, wireless dongle, warranty and safety guides, and an Allen key for adjusting the side panel in the box.
Weight
My scale shows around 113 g (+/- 1 g), which is slightly less than the weight cited by Corsair. Compared to the ROCCAT Kone XP Air at 98 g or the SteelSeries Aerox 9 Wireless at 88 g, the Scimitar Elite Wireless weighs quite a bit more, but features more buttons and functions than the former and no holes, unlike the latter. In addition, it is lighter than both the Razer Naga V2 Pro (131 g) and Naga V2 Hyperspeed (118 g with battery). A good weight overall.
Cable
The Scimitar Elite Wireless comes with a braided USB Type-A to Type-C charging cable. In terms of flexibility, this one can only be described as supremely stiff, preventing playing while charging almost entirely. The cable is 1.80 m long.
As the Scimitar Elite Wireless lacks a wireless extender, the wireless dongle needs to be plugged directly into a USB port. When doing so, as per
Intel's documentation, it is strongly recommended not to use a USB 3.x port, as ports of this type may introduce interference adversely affecting wireless operation. A storage compartment for the dongle is found on the underside of the mouse.
Feet
The feet on the Scimitar Elite Wireless are black-dyed PTFE (Teflon) feet with slightly rounded edges. Glide is good and thickness average.