Redragon M602 Griffin Review | 78 Data compared

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  • Avg. price in UK: ~£20
  • Avg. price in US: ~$20
  • Connectivity: wireless+wired
  • Maximum polling rate: 1000 Hz
  • Maximum DPI: 7200 DPI
  • Weight: 103.4 g

Redragon M602 Griffin review. Compare 78 technical specifications and user reviews to see how it ranks among mice and if it is worth buying.

6.7

Overall score

What it is: An overall evaluation of the mouse's quality, based on technical analyses and user reviews.

When it matters: When you need a quick reference to identify the best mice on the market.

Score components:

80.0%

6.0

Technical Score

20.0%

9.4

User score

Good
6.0

Technical Score

What it is: An assessment of the mouse's technical performance, covering key areas such as sensor performance, buttons and features, connectivity, battery life, ergonomics, software, and build quality.

When it matters: When you want to compare mice based on technical performance and available features.

Score components:

36.0%

4.4

Performance & Sensor

22.0%

8.0

Controls

16.0%

5.9

Design

14.0%

7.6

Features

7.0%

2.6

Connectivity

5.0%

9.2

Battery & Charging

Good
9.4

User score

What it is: A rating that combines user reviews and the total number of reviews received by the mouse.

When it matters: When you want to understand how a mouse performs in daily use or gaming and how reliable it is in terms of comfort, button feel, tracking accuracy, and long-term durability.

Score components:

70.0%

9.2

User reviews

30.0%

10

Popularity

User score:
United Kingdom
amazon
4.5
(30239)
amazon
4.6
(477)
United States
Amazon_logo.png
4.6
(33691)

(Reviews last updated: May 2026)

Exceptional
  • 6.0
    Gaming

    Score components:

    28.0%

    3.7

    Maximum polling rate

    24.0%

    8.9

    N. of programmable buttons

    20.0%

    10

    Onboard memory profiles

    16.0%

    1.0

    Maximum tracking speed

    12.0%

    5.2

    Weight

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Best prices in UK

Best rankings

?

Available: ranking among products currently available (including other versions of this product).
All: ranking among all products in the database.

Verdict

The Redragon M602 Griffin is a right-handed ergonomic wired gaming mouse featuring a high-precision optical sensor with an adjustable DPI ranging from 800 to 7,200 and a 1,000Hz polling rate. Key characteristics include seven programmable buttons, seven RGB backlight modes, and five onboard memory profiles for storing custom macros and settings. Its primary pros are its budget-friendly price point, comfortable contoured shape with dedicated finger rests, and durable build quality rated for 10 million clicks. However, notable cons include its relatively high weight (approximately 150g), significant click latency compared to higher-end models, a stiff rubber cable that can impede movement, and a high lift-off distance that may affect precision during intense gameplay.

Technical Specifications of Redragon M602 Griffin

Technical Score

What it is: An assessment of the mouse's technical performance, covering key areas such as sensor performance, buttons and features, connectivity, battery life, ergonomics, software, and build quality.

When it matters: When you want to compare mice based on technical performance and available features.

Score components:

36.0%

4.4

Performance & Sensor

22.0%

8.0

Controls

16.0%

5.9

Design

14.0%

7.6

Features

7.0%

2.6

Connectivity

5.0%

9.2

Battery & Charging

6.0
Redragon M602 Griffin has a technical score of 6.01 points, which is higher than that of 56.4% of products in this category.
User score

What it is: A rating that combines user reviews and the total number of reviews received by the mouse.

When it matters: When you want to understand how a mouse performs in daily use or gaming and how reliable it is in terms of comfort, button feel, tracking accuracy, and long-term durability.

Score components:

70.0%

9.2

User reviews

30.0%

10

Popularity

User score:
United Kingdom
amazon
4.5
(30239)
amazon
4.6
(477)
United States
Amazon_logo.png
4.6
(33691)

(Reviews last updated: May 2026)

9.4
Redragon M602 Griffin has a user score of 9.44 points, which is higher than that of 95.7% of products in this category.
Popularity
What it is: An indicator based on the number of reviews received by the mouse.
When it matters: When you prefer a mouse that has already been chosen and reviewed by many other users.
10
Redragon M602 Griffin has a popularity of 10 points, which is higher than 63.3% of products in this category.
Ratio quality/price

What it is: An indicator that combines the mouse's overall rating with its cost.

When it matters: When you are looking for a mouse that offers a strong balance of performance, features, and price.

Score components:

60.0%

6.7

Overall score

40.0%

10

Price

7.7
Redragon M602 Griffin has a quality-to-price ratio of 7.7 points, which is higher than 62% of products in this category.
Brand name
What it is: The manufacturer or brand of the product.
When it matters: When you prefer a specific ecosystem, support network, or design philosophy.

Importance: MEDIUM

Redragon
Maximum polling rate
What it is: The maximum number of position reports the mouse can send to the computer each second, measured in Hertz (Hz).
When it matters: When you are chasing the lowest possible input delay for competitive play and want the mouse reporting as often as possible.

Importance: HIGH

Good value: >=1000 Hz

1,000 Hz
Redragon M602 Griffin has a maximum polling rate of 1000 Hz, which is higher than 27.8% of mice and equal to 55.1% of mice.
Wired polling rate
What it is: The polling rate the mouse reaches when it is connected with a cable.
When it matters: When you mainly use the mouse wired and want maximum responsiveness.

Importance: HIGH

Good value: >=1000 Hz

1,000 Hz
Redragon M602 Griffin has a wired polling rate of 1000 Hz, which is higher than 13.3% of mice and equal to 77.3% of mice.
2.4 GHz polling rate
What it is: The polling rate available when the mouse is used over a 2.4 GHz wireless connection.
When it matters: When you use the 2.4 GHz receiver and want near-wired performance.

Importance: HIGH

Good value: >=1000 Hz

N/A
Bluetooth polling rate
What it is: The polling rate available when the mouse is connected through Bluetooth.
When it matters: When you use Bluetooth and want to understand the trade-off in responsiveness.

Importance: LOW

Good value: >=125 Hz

125 Hz
Redragon M602 Griffin has a Bluetooth polling rate of 125 Hz, which is higher than 66.8% of mice and equal to 31.8% of mice.
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Connectivity
What it is: The mouse's high-level connectivity class: wired only, wireless only, or both wired and wireless.
When it matters: When you need to know at a glance whether the mouse is wired, wireless, or flexible enough to support both.

Importance: HIGH

wireless+wired
Redragon M602 Griffin supports wireless+wired connectivity, which is more versatile than 56.8% of mice and equal to 43.3% of mice.
connection modes: wired / 2.4 GHz.
Bluetooth support
What it is: Shows whether the mouse can connect over Bluetooth instead of relying only on a wired link or proprietary USB receiver.
When it matters: When you want a dongle-free connection option for laptops, tablets, or devices with limited USB ports.

Importance: MEDIUM

no
Redragon M602 Griffin does not support Bluetooth. 35.6% of mice support Bluetooth.
Bluetooth version
What it is: The Bluetooth standard version supported by the mouse for wireless connectivity and compatibility.
When it matters: When you care about Bluetooth compatibility, efficiency, and connection quality.

Importance: LOW

Good value: >=5.1

N/A
Proprietary 2.4 GHz support
What it is: Shows whether the mouse supports the brand's dedicated 2.4 GHz wireless system rather than relying only on Bluetooth.
When it matters: When you want the brand's fast low-latency wireless mode instead of depending only on Bluetooth performance.

Importance: MEDIUM

no
Redragon M602 Griffin does not support proprietary 2.4 GHz wireless. 61.6% of mice support proprietary 2.4 GHz wireless.
Receiver included
What it is: Shows whether a compatible wireless receiver is included in the box instead of needing to be bought separately.
When it matters: When you expect full wireless use immediately and do not want to buy extra accessories just to get started.

Importance: MEDIUM

yes
Redragon M602 Griffin includes a receiver. 37.7% of mice include a receiver.
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Battery life
What it is: The operating time the mouse can deliver on a full charge or a fresh set of batteries under normal use.
When it matters: When the mouse needs to last through workdays, travel, or repeated gaming sessions without constant charging.

Importance: HIGH

Good value: >400 hours

N/A
Battery capacity
What it is: The amount of energy the built-in battery can store, measured in milliampere-hours (mAh).
When it matters: When you want rough battery context behind the runtime claim instead of judging endurance from marketing hours alone.

Importance: MEDIUM

Good value: >=500 mAh

700 mAh
Redragon M602 Griffin has a battery capacity of 700 mAh, which is larger than 81.5% of mice and equal to 2.7% of mice.
Battery form factor
What it is: The battery format used by the mouse, such as AA, AAA, integrated rechargeable cell, or another form.
When it matters: When you care whether the mouse uses easy-to-replace AA or AAA cells or a sealed rechargeable pack.

Importance: LOW

?
Rechargeable battery
What it is: Shows whether the mouse uses a rechargeable battery instead of relying only on disposable cells.
When it matters: When you prefer topping the mouse up over USB or a dock instead of buying disposable batteries repeatedly.

Importance: HIGH

no
Redragon M602 Griffin does not use a rechargeable battery. 46% of mice use a rechargeable battery.
Removable battery
What it is: Shows whether the battery can be removed and replaced by the user instead of being sealed inside the mouse.
When it matters: When long-term serviceability matters and you would rather replace the battery than replace the whole mouse later.

Importance: LOW

no
Redragon M602 Griffin does not use a removable battery. 22.3% of mice use a removable battery.
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N. of buttons
What it is: The total number of physical buttons available on the mouse body.
When it matters: When you need enough physical controls for shortcuts, MMO binds, browser actions, or productivity commands.

Importance: HIGH

Good value: >=7

8
Redragon M602 Griffin has 8 buttons, which is more than 78.5% of mice and equal to 9.7% of mice.
N. of side buttons
What it is: The number of buttons placed on the side of the mouse, typically for thumb access.
When it matters: When thumb-access buttons matter for browser navigation, MMOs, or productivity shortcuts.

Importance: MEDIUM

Good value: >=2

2
Redragon M602 Griffin has 2 side buttons, which is more than 15.1% of mice and equal to 68.4% of mice.
N. of programmable buttons
What it is: The number of mouse buttons that can be customized or reassigned through software or onboard settings.
When it matters: When remapping flexibility matters and you want more actions moved off the keyboard.

Importance: HIGH

Good value: >=7

7
Redragon M602 Griffin has 7 programmable buttons, which is more than 67.8% of mice and equal to 12.3% of mice.
DPI switching button
What it is: Shows whether the mouse includes a dedicated control for changing DPI levels on the fly.
When it matters: When you want to swap sensitivity instantly for sniping, browsing, editing, or different game genres.

Importance: MEDIUM

yes
Redragon M602 Griffin includes a DPI switching button. 14.7% of mice include a DPI switching button.
Profile switching button
What it is: Shows whether the mouse includes a dedicated control for changing onboard or saved profiles during use.
When it matters: When you switch between saved profiles for different games or work routines.

Importance: LOW

yes
Redragon M602 Griffin includes a profile switching button. 83.3% of mice include a profile switching button.
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Orientation
What it is: The hand orientation the mouse is designed for, such as right-handed, left-handed, or ambidextrous use.
When it matters: When hand comfort matters and you need a shape that fits your grip and dominant hand.

Importance: HIGH

right-handed
Weight
What it is: The overall weight of the mouse itself, which influences portability, comfort, and movement feel.
When it matters: When you care about how light or substantial the mouse feels during long sessions.

Importance: HIGH

Good value: <100 g

103.4 g
Redragon M602 Griffin weighs 103.4 g, which is heavier than 74.6% of mice.
Extra weights
What it is: The total weight of removable extra weights included for tuning the balance or feel of the mouse.
When it matters: When you care about tuning balance and overall heft instead of being locked into the stock feel.

Importance: LOW

0 g
Redragon M602 Griffin comes with 0 g of extra weights, which is equal to 95.4% of mice.
Cable length
What it is: The length of the supplied cable used for wired operation or charging, usually measured in meters.
When it matters: When you need enough cable reach across your desk or charging setup.

Importance: LOW

Good value: >=1.8 m

1.8 m
Redragon M602 Griffin comes with a 1.8 m cable, which is longer than 18.9% of mice and equal to 64.5% of mice.
Cable type
What it is: The construction style of the cable, such as braided, rubber, or paracord, which affects flexibility and durability.
When it matters: When cable drag, flexibility, and durability affect how the mouse feels in use.

Importance: LOW

N/A
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Onboard memory profiles
What it is: The number of user profiles that can be stored directly in the mouse memory for use without reconfiguring software each time.
When it matters: When you use different games, apps, or devices and want settings saved directly on the mouse.

Importance: MEDIUM

Good value: >=3

5
Redragon M602 Griffin stores 5 onboard profiles, which is more than 81.2% of mice and equal to 18.2% of mice.
Onboard memory size
What it is: The amount of onboard memory available inside the mouse for storing settings, macros, or profiles.
When it matters: When you store complex macros, settings, or several onboard profiles.

Importance: LOW

Good value: >=512 KB

?
Software name
What it is: The name of the official software used to configure the mouse, update firmware, or customize features.
When it matters: When software ecosystem and customization tools influence your buying decision.

Importance: LOW

Redragon Gaming Mouse Software
Firmware upgradable
What it is: Shows whether the mouse can receive firmware updates for fixes, compatibility improvements, or feature changes.
When it matters: When you want the option for later fixes, stability improvements, or performance tweaks after purchase.

Importance: LOW

no
Redragon M602 Griffin does not support firmware upgrades. 72.9% of mice support firmware upgrades.
Suitable for gaming
What it is: Shows whether the mouse is positioned or tuned around gaming-focused speed, latency, and control features.
When it matters: When fast clicks, low latency, and gaming-oriented features are priorities.

Importance: MEDIUM

yes
Redragon M602 Griffin is suitable for gaming. 24.3% of mice are suitable for gaming.

Redragon M602 Griffin vs the average mouse

  • 4 more onboard profiles
    Redragon M602 Griffin stores 5 onboard profiles, while the average mouse stores 1 onboard profiles.
    What it is: The number of user profiles that can be stored directly in the mouse memory for use without reconfiguring software each time.
    When it matters: When you use different games, apps, or devices and want settings saved directly on the mouse.

    Importance: MEDIUM

    Good value: >=3

    Redragon M602 Griffin stores 5 onboard profiles, while the average mouse stores 1 onboard profiles.5 vs 1
  • 1 more programmable buttons
    Redragon M602 Griffin has 7 programmable buttons, while the average mouse has 6 programmable buttons.
    What it is: The number of mouse buttons that can be customized or reassigned through software or onboard settings.
    When it matters: When remapping flexibility matters and you want more actions moved off the keyboard.

    Importance: HIGH

    Good value: >=7

    Redragon M602 Griffin has 7 programmable buttons, while the average mouse has 6 programmable buttons.7 vs 6
  • Usable while charging
    Redragon M602 Griffin can be used while charging, while the average mouse cannot. 47.5% of mice can be used while charging.
    What it is: Shows whether the mouse keeps working normally while a charging cable is connected.
    When it matters: When you do not want downtime while the mouse battery is charging.

    Importance: MEDIUM

    Redragon M602 Griffin can be used while charging, while the average mouse cannot. 47.5% of mice can be used while charging.
  • Profile switch button
    Redragon M602 Griffin includes a profile switching button, while the average mouse does not. 16.8% of mice include a profile switching button.
    What it is: Shows whether the mouse includes a dedicated control for changing onboard or saved profiles during use.
    When it matters: When you switch between saved profiles for different games or work routines.

    Importance: LOW

    Redragon M602 Griffin includes a profile switching button, while the average mouse does not. 16.8% of mice include a profile switching button.
  • 18% higher user score
    Redragon M602 Griffin has a higher user score than the average mouse (9.44 vs 8.000).
    What it is: A rating that combines user reviews and the total number of reviews received by the mouse.
    When it matters: When you want to understand how a mouse performs in daily use or gaming and how reliable it is in terms of comfort, button feel, tracking accuracy, and long-term durability.
    Redragon M602 Griffin has a higher user score than the average mouse (9.44 vs 8.000).9.44 vs 8
  • Detachable cable
    Redragon M602 Griffin comes with a detachable cable, while the average mouse does not. 42.9% of mice come with a detachable cable.
    What it is: Shows whether the cable can be unplugged and replaced instead of staying permanently attached to the mouse.
    When it matters: When you value easier cable replacement, transport, or long-term repairability.

    Importance: LOW

    Redragon M602 Griffin comes with a detachable cable, while the average mouse does not. 42.9% of mice come with a detachable cable.
  • Versatile connectivity
    Redragon M602 Griffin supports wireless+wired connectivity, while the average mouse supports wireless connectivity.
    connection modes: wired / 2.4 GHz.
    What it is: The mouse's high-level connectivity class: wired only, wireless only, or both wired and wireless.
    When it matters: When you need to know at a glance whether the mouse is wired, wireless, or flexible enough to support both.

    Importance: HIGH

    Redragon M602 Griffin supports wireless+wired connectivity, while the average mouse supports wireless connectivity.wireless+wired vs wireless
  • 2 more buttons
    Redragon M602 Griffin has 8 buttons, while the average mouse has 6 buttons.
    What it is: The total number of physical buttons available on the mouse body.
    When it matters: When you need enough physical controls for shortcuts, MMO binds, browser actions, or productivity commands.

    Importance: HIGH

    Good value: >=7

    Redragon M602 Griffin has 8 buttons, while the average mouse has 6 buttons.8 vs 6
  • Versatile connectivity
    Redragon M602 Griffin supports wireless+wired connectivity, while the average mouse supports wireless connectivity.
  • Receiver storage inside mouse
    Redragon M602 Griffin has receiver storage inside the mouse, while the average mouse does not. 45.9% of mice have receiver storage inside the mouse.
  • Usable while charging
    Redragon M602 Griffin can be used while charging, while the average mouse cannot. 47.5% of mice can be used while charging.
  • 1 more programmable buttons
    Redragon M602 Griffin has 7 programmable buttons, while the average mouse has 6 programmable buttons.
  • Profile switch button
    Redragon M602 Griffin includes a profile switching button, while the average mouse does not. 16.8% of mice include a profile switching button.
  • 2 more buttons
    Redragon M602 Griffin has 8 buttons, while the average mouse has 6 buttons.
  • Detachable cable
    Redragon M602 Griffin comes with a detachable cable, while the average mouse does not. 42.9% of mice come with a detachable cable.
  • 4 more onboard profiles
    Redragon M602 Griffin stores 5 onboard profiles, while the average mouse stores 1 onboard profiles.
  • 92.5% lower tracking speed
    Redragon M602 Griffin has a maximum tracking speed of 30 IPS, while the average mouse has a maximum tracking speed of 400 IPS.
  • 75% lower maximum acceleration
    Redragon M602 Griffin has a maximum acceleration of 10 G, while the average mouse has a maximum acceleration of 40 G.
  • 28% lower maximum DPI
    Redragon M602 Griffin has a maximum DPI of 7,200 DPI, while the average mouse has a maximum DPI of 10,000 DPI.
  • No angle snapping support
    Redragon M602 Griffin does not support angle snapping, while the average mouse does. 53.9% of mice support angle snapping.
  • Poor default DPI tuning
    Redragon M602 Griffin uses a default DPI of 800 DPI, while the average mouse uses a default DPI of 1,000 DPI.
  • No proprietary 2.4 GHz support
    Redragon M602 Griffin does not support proprietary 2.4 GHz wireless, while the average mouse does. 61.5% of mice support proprietary 2.4 GHz wireless.
  • No battery level indicator
    Redragon M602 Griffin does not include a battery level indicator, while the average mouse does. 59.2% of mice include a battery level indicator.
  • 25% higher mouse weight
    Redragon M602 Griffin weighs 103.4 g, while the average mouse weighs 82.745 g.
  • 15 mm wider mouse width
    Redragon M602 Griffin has a width of 81 mm, while the average mouse has a width of 66 mm.
  • Thin glide feet
    Redragon M602 Griffin uses 0.7 mm thick mouse feet, while the average mouse uses 0.8 mm thick mouse feet.
  • 6 older release date
    Redragon M602 Griffin has a release date of 2,015, while the average mouse has a release date of 2,021.
  • 2.3 mm taller mouse height
    Redragon M602 Griffin has a height of 42 mm, while the average mouse has a height of 39.7 mm.
  • No firmware upgrades
    Redragon M602 Griffin does not support firmware upgrades, while the average mouse does. 72.8% of mice support firmware upgrades.
  • No proprietary 2.4 GHz support
    Redragon M602 Griffin does not support proprietary 2.4 GHz wireless, while the average mouse does. 61.5% of mice support proprietary 2.4 GHz wireless.
    What it is: Shows whether the mouse supports the brand's dedicated 2.4 GHz wireless system rather than relying only on Bluetooth.
    When it matters: When you want the brand's fast low-latency wireless mode instead of depending only on Bluetooth performance.

    Importance: MEDIUM

    Redragon M602 Griffin does not support proprietary 2.4 GHz wireless, while the average mouse does. 61.5% of mice support proprietary 2.4 GHz wireless.
  • No firmware upgrades
    Redragon M602 Griffin does not support firmware upgrades, while the average mouse does. 72.8% of mice support firmware upgrades.
    What it is: Shows whether the mouse can receive firmware updates for fixes, compatibility improvements, or feature changes.
    When it matters: When you want the option for later fixes, stability improvements, or performance tweaks after purchase.

    Importance: LOW

    Redragon M602 Griffin does not support firmware upgrades, while the average mouse does. 72.8% of mice support firmware upgrades.
  • 92.5% lower tracking speed
    Redragon M602 Griffin has a maximum tracking speed of 30 IPS, while the average mouse has a maximum tracking speed of 400 IPS.
    What it is: The highest movement speed the sensor can track accurately before it starts losing precision, usually expressed in inches per second (IPS).
    When it matters: When you make very fast swipes and do not want the sensor to lose tracking.

    Importance: HIGH

    Good value: >=400 IPS

    Redragon M602 Griffin has a maximum tracking speed of 30 IPS, while the average mouse has a maximum tracking speed of 400 IPS.30 IPS vs 400 IPS
  • 25% higher mouse weight
    Redragon M602 Griffin weighs 103.4 g, while the average mouse weighs 82.745 g.
    What it is: The overall weight of the mouse itself, which influences portability, comfort, and movement feel.
    When it matters: When you care about how light or substantial the mouse feels during long sessions.

    Importance: HIGH

    Good value: <100 g

    Redragon M602 Griffin weighs 103.4 g, while the average mouse weighs 82.745 g.103.4 g vs 82.745 g
  • 75% lower maximum acceleration
    Redragon M602 Griffin has a maximum acceleration of 10 G, while the average mouse has a maximum acceleration of 40 G.
    What it is: The highest acceleration the mouse sensor can handle without tracking errors, typically measured in G.
    When it matters: When you flick the mouse aggressively and need the sensor to stay accurate.

    Importance: HIGH

    Good value: >=50 G

    Redragon M602 Griffin has a maximum acceleration of 10 G, while the average mouse has a maximum acceleration of 40 G.10 G vs 40 G
  • No angle snapping support
    Redragon M602 Griffin does not support angle snapping, while the average mouse does. 53.9% of mice support angle snapping.
    What it is: Shows whether the sensor smooths cursor movement into straighter lines instead of reporting raw hand motion.
    When it matters: When precision matters and you want to know whether the cursor follows raw hand movement instead of corrected straight lines.

    Importance: LOW

    Redragon M602 Griffin does not support angle snapping, while the average mouse does. 53.9% of mice support angle snapping.
  • 28% lower maximum DPI
    Redragon M602 Griffin has a maximum DPI of 7,200 DPI, while the average mouse has a maximum DPI of 10,000 DPI.
    What it is: The highest sensitivity setting supported by the mouse sensor, measured in dots per inch (DPI).
    When it matters: When extremely high sensitivity is part of your setup, even if it matters less than sensor quality for most users.

    Importance: HIGH

    Good value: >=18000 DPI

    Redragon M602 Griffin has a maximum DPI of 7,200 DPI, while the average mouse has a maximum DPI of 10,000 DPI.7200 DPI vs 10000 DPI
  • No battery level indicator
    Redragon M602 Griffin does not include a battery level indicator, while the average mouse does. 59.2% of mice include a battery level indicator.
    What it is: Shows whether the mouse gives a visible or app-based battery readout instead of leaving charge level to guesswork.
    When it matters: When you do not want the mouse to die unexpectedly in the middle of work or a match.

    Importance: LOW

    Redragon M602 Griffin does not include a battery level indicator, while the average mouse does. 59.2% of mice include a battery level indicator.

Graphic comparison of Redragon M602 Griffin and

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Third-party reviews

United States

(Reviews last updated: May 2026)

What customers like about Redragon M602 Griffin?

  • Excellent value for money, often found under $20
  • Comfortable ergonomic design with dedicated thumb and pinky rests
  • Solid build quality for a budget-friendly device
  • Customizable RGB lighting with multiple modes
  • User-friendly software for remapping buttons and adjusting DPI
  • Onboard memory for saving profiles and custom settings
  • Smooth gliding on various surfaces thanks to Teflon feet

What customers dislike about Redragon M602 Griffin?

  • Considered heavy (approx. 105g-130g) compared to modern ultra-light mice
  • High click latency and high lift-off distance may affect competitive gaming
  • Stiff rubber cable that can retain kinks from packaging
  • Large size makes it difficult for small hands to use with claw or fingertip grips
  • Software is only compatible with Windows systems
  • The right-side finger groove may not be comfortable for all grip styles
  • Durability issues reported with the scroll wheel and occasional sensor spin-outs

Video reviews

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