Hardware detail
Xtrfy M68PRO
medium 55g FPS mouse with 59.3 mm grip width, medium rear support, medium hump position, and conservative waist curve.

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Shape read
What stands out in hand
The numbers help, but the shell story is usually about width, hump placement, and how much support the rear gives you.
Core size
123 × 64 × 40 mm gives this mouse a medium footprint for FPS play.
Grip width
59.3 mm usually decides whether the shell feels locked in or a little too wide for fast micro-adjustments.
Rear support
medium rear support changes how much the mouse pushes back into your palm during stop-start aiming.
Hump and waist
medium hump placement with a conservative waist often tells you more than the marketing page does.
Community notes
What players usually care about here
These are the kinds of readouts players usually trade with each other after a few sessions, not just after reading the spec sheet.
In hand
symmetrical shape, 55g weight, and claw grip grip bias suggest how this shell will feel once you start flicking and resetting.
Best match
This kind of shell tends to make the most sense for players who want medium 55g FPS mouse with 59.3 mm grip width, medium rear support, medium hump position, and conservative waist curve
Watch for
wireless connection, 1000 Hz polling, and the shell profile together matter more than a single headline spec.
Similar feel
If this shape makes sense to you, look at these too
These picks are close in shape, size, weight, or grip profile, so they are usually the first alternatives players compare.
MCHOSE
M7 Ultra
55g · symmetrical
medium 55g FPS mouse with 58.6 mm grip width, strong rear support, rear hump position, and aggressive waist curve.
Rapoo
Vt2
56g · symmetrical
medium 56g FPS mouse with 59 mm grip width, medium rear support, medium hump position, and conservative waist curve.
Rapoo
Vt2max
56g · symmetrical
medium 56g FPS mouse with 59 mm grip width, medium rear support, medium hump position, and conservative waist curve.
Sens fit
What kind of sens range this mouse usually pairs with
There is no hard rule here, but players usually care about whether a mouse feels more natural in low-sens, balanced, or faster setups.
Low sens
Xtrfy M68PRO makes the most sense if you like wider desk movement, more stopping power, and a shell that stays planted during resets.
Balanced
Xtrfy M68PRO sits comfortably in the middle if you mix flicking with tracking and do not want your shell to fight you.
Higher sens
Xtrfy M68PRO can still work for faster setups if the shape feels clean in hand and you value quick corrections over big sweeps.
Community take
How this mouse fits into an FPS setup
Specs matter, but shape, weight, and grip fit usually matter more once you start actually playing with it.
Weight profile
At 55g, this mouse sits in a range that can suit fast FPS play without becoming a pure spec-chasing novelty.
Shape first
The symmetrical shell matters more than sensor marketing if your grip style does not naturally fit it.
Battery and polling
1000 Hz polling and roughly 0 hours of battery life give it a modern competitive baseline.
Keep comparing
Keep the comparison going
A mouse page is more useful when it leads you into comparisons, guides, and sensitivity context.
FAQ
Xtrfy M68PRO FAQ
This short FAQ answers the practical questions players usually ask before they buy or test a mouse.
Is M68PRO a good FPS mouse?
Xtrfy M68PRO is positioned as an FPS-focused option, especially for players who care about symmetrical, 55g weight, and 1000 Hz polling.
Who is M68PRO best for?
medium 55g FPS mouse with 59.3 mm grip width, medium rear support, medium hump position, and conservative waist curve.
What should you compare before buying this mouse?
Weight, shape, click feel, battery life, and how your grip style matches the shell are all more important than raw spec-sheet hype alone.