Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro Niko Edition | 57g Ultra-Lightweight | Focus Pro 45K Gen-2 Sensor | 8000Hz HyperSpeed Wireless | Optical Scroll Wheel | Gen-4 Optical Switches | 150-Hour Battery
CS2 Competition Mouse Tuned to NiKo's Exact 1600 DPI and 2000Hz Configuration for Kenyan Esports Players
Condition: New
Note: price and availability are subject to change without prior notice
Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro Niko Edition is the 57g wireless ergonomic esports mouse with the Focus Pro 45K Gen-2 optical sensor, 8000Hz HyperSpeed wireless polling, and up to 150 hours of battery life, now available at Mascom International in Nairobi for KSh 34,000. This is the CS legend Nikola "NiKo" Kovač special variant of Razer's right-handed ergonomic esports mouse, factory-loaded with his personal 1600 DPI and 2000Hz polling configuration and featuring the flame-inspired Deagle design of the Razer NiKo Collection. Mascom International stocks the Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro Niko Edition with full manufacturer warranty coverage, genuine Razer packaging, and countrywide pay-on-arrival delivery across all 47 Kenyan counties.
The Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro Niko Edition was built specifically for competitive Counter-Strike 2, Valorant, and tactical shooter players who need sub-millisecond input response, consistent tracking under fast flicks, and hand-fit comfort during long tournament sessions. Kenya's growing esports community — the cafe-based tournament circuits in Nairobi, the university gaming societies at JKUAT and Strathmore, the Safaricom Championship competitors, and the home-streaming content creators on YouTube and Twitch — get a mouse that has already been proven at the highest level of international CS2 play by NiKo himself. At 57 grams, this Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro Niko Edition weighs 10% less than the V3 Pro generation and delivers faster wrist-aim transitions without the hand fatigue that heavier 80g-plus mice produce across three-hour scrim sessions.
No other esports mouse available through Kenya's electronics retailers combines the colorway and branding of a current world-class CS2 pro with the Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro's Gen-4 optical switches, 100-million click lifespan, and 37% lower latency figures versus the previous generation. At Mascom International, we're seeing strong demand for this Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro Niko Edition from Nairobi's competitive FPS players who want the exact hardware tuning their favorite pro uses, and from content creators who recognize the flame-themed finish immediately on camera during stream overlays. Users consistently report that the factory-loaded 1600 DPI and 2000Hz polling settings eliminate the first-setup guesswork, letting them play a competitive match within minutes of unboxing. Walk into our Kimathi Street shop to feel the shape in your palm, or order for countrywide delivery with payment only on arrival.
What makes the Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro Niko Edition different from the standard DeathAdder V4 Pro?
The Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro Niko Edition carries the same 57g ergonomic shell and Focus Pro 45K Gen-2 internals as the standard DeathAdder V4 Pro, but adds an exclusive NiKo Collection flame colorway inspired by his famous Desert Eagle play, NiKo's printed autograph on the chassis, and factory-preloaded settings at 1600 DPI and 2000Hz polling — the exact tuning he uses in professional Counter-Strike 2 matches. The standard DeathAdder V4 Pro ships with a default 1600 DPI but uses a 1000Hz polling baseline and standard black or white colorways. For Kenyan players who already know NiKo's configuration through ProSettings.net or his streams, the Niko Edition removes the setup friction — plug in the HyperPolling Wireless Dongle and the mouse reports at the same cadence NiKo uses at IEM and BLAST Premier events. The NiKo branded edition also makes a strong visual statement on stream overlays, at LAN tournaments at Sarit Centre gaming events, and on the desks of CS2 followers who track the international circuit closely.
How does the Focus Pro 45K Gen-2 sensor perform for competitive aim tracking?
The Razer Focus Pro 45K Gen-2 optical sensor in the Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro Niko Edition delivers 45,000 DPI ceiling, 900 inches-per-second tracking speed, 85g acceleration tolerance, and 99.8% resolution accuracy — figures that exceed the real-world tracking demands of any human player in CS2, Valorant, or Apex Legends. In practical terms, 900 IPS means the sensor will not spin out or lose tracking even during the fastest wrist-flick 180-degree turns, a failure mode that plagues older sensors on mouse pads exceeding 300 IPS of flick speed. The 99.8% resolution accuracy eliminates the subtle cursor drift that competing sensors introduce over long sessions, keeping your crosshair placement consistent round after round during competitive CS2 matches. Kenyan players running 1600 DPI at 400mm/360 eDPI configurations get tracking that stays aligned with hand motion across low-speed crosshair adjustments during spray-control situations and high-speed 180-degree flicks during clutch scenarios. The sensor auto-calibrates lift-off distance across cloth, hybrid, and glass mouse mats, so switching between a Razer Gigantus V2 Pro at home and a different surface at a LAN venue does not require manual recalibration.
Why does 8000Hz polling rate matter for competitive esports?
The Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro Niko Edition supports true 8000Hz polling rate through the included HyperPolling Wireless Dongle, sending position data to your PC every 0.125 milliseconds instead of the 1ms interval that 1000Hz mice produce. At 8000Hz, the Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro Niko Edition reports 37% lower input latency than the previous generation DeathAdder V3 Pro — a difference measurable by latency testing tools and visible in competitive frag clips where split-second reactions separate wins from losses. For Kenya's CS2 and Valorant players running 144Hz, 240Hz, or 360Hz monitors, 8000Hz polling feeds the display pipeline with position data faster than the monitor can refresh, eliminating the micro-stutter that 1000Hz mice introduce on high-refresh displays. The Niko Edition ships factory-tuned to 2000Hz rather than 8000Hz because NiKo himself prefers the tracking stability of 2000Hz for CS2 spray control over the raw responsiveness of 8000Hz — but the choice is yours through Razer Synapse, with auto-switching polling rate profiles that change cadence per game. At 1000Hz, battery life reaches up to 150 hours; at 8000Hz, expect roughly 24 hours of continuous play before needing to top up the battery via USB-C.
How long does the battery actually last during real gaming sessions?
The Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro Niko Edition delivers up to 150 hours of battery life at 1000Hz polling on the latest firmware — a figure Razer raised from the original 120-hour packaging specification following a post-launch efficiency update. For Kenyan players gaming 4 hours per weekday evening and 8 hours per weekend day, that translates to roughly 4-5 weeks between charges at 1000Hz, or about one week between charges at the 2000Hz rate NiKo uses. At 8000Hz polling, expect approximately 24 hours of continuous play, meaning tournament competitors running the mouse at full speed will need to charge between sessions. The USB-C charging port accepts any standard phone charger cable, and the mouse operates tethered through the same cable if the battery runs flat mid-match — no need to swap in a backup mouse during a competitive game. Status LEDs on the mouse indicate battery level, connection state, and current polling rate by default, though all three LEDs can be reconfigured through Razer Synapse to display DPI stages or switched off entirely for streamers who prefer a clean visual profile.
What is the optical scroll wheel and why is it important for esports?
The Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro Niko Edition introduces the first optical scroll wheel on an esports mouse in Razer's lineup, replacing the mechanical encoder found on previous generations with an optical tracking mechanism that pros have specifically requested for competitive CS2 and Valorant play. The optical scroll wheel eliminates the double-scroll and phantom-scroll failures that develop in mechanical encoders over 12-18 months of heavy use — a failure mode that ruined bunny-hop binds, weapon-switch macros, and scroll-jump configurations on older mice. For Kenyan CS2 players who bind jump to mouse wheel down, the optical scroll wheel delivers consistent single-notch registration through thousands of competitive rounds without the gradual accuracy degradation that mechanical wheels produce. The wheel retains the tactile notched feel that competitive players require for precise weapon selection and scroll-bind precision, so the transition from a mechanical wheel to the optical version feels natural rather than uncanny. Razer's Gen-4 optical switches on the left and right mouse buttons follow the same principle — optical actuation for a 100-million click lifespan, zero debounce delay, and immunity to the chatter issues that mechanical switches develop over time.
Who should choose the Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro Niko Edition?
The Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro Niko Edition suits right-handed esports players competing in Counter-Strike 2, Valorant, Apex Legends, Rainbow Six Siege, and similar tactical shooters where palm-grip and claw-grip ergonomics outperform ambidextrous symmetrical designs like the Razer Viper series. If your hand measures between 17cm and 20cm from wrist crease to middle fingertip, the 128mm x 68mm x 44mm chassis fits naturally into a relaxed palm grip, supporting the micro-adjustments and controlled wrist aim that CS2 requires. Kenyan tournament competitors preparing for Safaricom gaming championships, regional LAN events, and online ranked climbing benefit from hardware validated at the highest level of international play. Content creators streaming CS2 or Valorant from Nairobi gaming cafes and home studios get visual brand recognition from the flame colorway that viewers identify immediately. Casual players who want a mouse that will last through years of daily use benefit from the 100-million click switch lifespan and the optical scroll wheel reliability, rather than replacing a mid-range mouse every 12-18 months when switches develop chatter issues.
How does the ergonomic shape compare to ambidextrous esports mice?
The Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro Niko Edition uses the award-winning right-handed ergonomic shape that has defined the DeathAdder line since 2006, with a raised right-side hump that fills the palm naturally and a gently curved left flank that supports the thumb without requiring conscious grip pressure. Compared to ambidextrous symmetrical mice like the Razer Viper V4 Pro or Logitech G Pro X Superlight 2, the DeathAdder shape produces measurably lower hand fatigue during three-hour-plus sessions because the palm rests on the mouse rather than actively gripping it. For palm-grip players — roughly 60% of the CS2 professional scene according to ProSettings.net tracking data — the ergonomic DeathAdder shape is the right choice. Claw-grip players also find the shape compatible because the raised hump provides a stable anchor for the palm base while fingertips curve forward to the buttons. Fingertip-grip players typically prefer the flatter ambidextrous Viper V4 Pro instead, though some still choose the DeathAdder for its button feel and sensor performance. The 57g weight keeps the ergonomic shape accessible to flick-heavy playstyles that traditionally favored lighter ambidextrous designs, effectively eliminating the weight penalty that ergonomic mice historically paid versus symmetrical competitors.
Will this mouse work reliably over Kenyan Wi-Fi and power conditions?
The Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro Niko Edition uses Razer HyperSpeed Wireless Gen-2 technology operating on the 2.4 GHz band, independent of your Wi-Fi router, Safaricom Home Fibre, or mobile hotspot connection — the mouse talks directly to the included HyperPolling Wireless Dongle via a proprietary protocol that is 63% more efficient than Gen-1 wireless. That means network congestion, Wi-Fi interference in shared apartment blocks, or ISP slowdowns during Nairobi peak hours have zero impact on mouse performance. The USB-C charging cable accepts 5V input from any phone charger, power bank, or laptop USB port, so power fluctuations on Kenya Power's grid do not affect the mouse itself. If you are gaming on an uninterruptible power supply during Nairobi load-shedding scenarios, the Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro Niko Edition continues wireless operation for the full battery duration without interruption — even if your PC shuts down, the mouse battery remains charged and ready for the next session. The smooth-touch chassis finish resists the fingerprint buildup and hand-oil staining that plagues matte-plastic mice in humid coastal conditions around Mombasa, and the larger PTFE feet glide smoothly on the cloth mouse mats most common in Kenyan gaming setups.
What tournament-grade features does the HyperPolling Wireless Dongle provide?
The included Razer HyperPolling Wireless Dongle is the component that enables the 8000Hz polling rate — it is not a simple receiver like the dongles that ship with consumer wireless mice. The dongle syncs mouse signal reporting to your PC's USB polling intervals for the most consistent tracking possible, eliminating the jitter that mismatched polling rates produce on budget wireless mice. For competitive Kenyan players, the dongle plugs directly into a motherboard USB 2.0 or USB 3.0 port — Razer recommends avoiding USB hubs and front-panel extensions because those can reduce the reliable polling rate the mouse achieves in practice. The dongle also includes a USB-C extender pass-through so you can position it close to the mouse on your desk, minimizing wireless distance and improving signal reliability in LAN environments where multiple 2.4 GHz wireless devices compete for the same spectrum. Razer Synapse software allows per-game polling rate profiles, automatically switching between 1000Hz for browsing, 2000Hz for CS2 (NiKo's preference), and 8000Hz for Valorant or Apex Legends based on the active application window. This auto-switching also helps battery life because the mouse runs at the lowest polling rate appropriate for each task rather than holding 8000Hz continuously.
Technical specifications
Sensor and Tracking
- Sensor: Razer Focus Pro 45K Optical Gen-2
- DPI Ceiling: 45,000
- Factory DPI Stages: 400, 800, 1600 (default), 3200, 6400
- Top Tracking Speed: 900 inches per second
- Acceleration Tolerance: 85g
- Resolution Accuracy: 99.8%
- Lift-off Distance: 26 configurable levels via Razer Synapse
- Surface Calibration: Auto-calibration for cloth, hybrid, and glass mouse mats
Wireless and Polling
- Wireless Protocol: Razer HyperSpeed Wireless Gen-2 at 2.4 GHz
- Peak Polling Rate: 8000Hz via HyperPolling Wireless Dongle
- Factory Polling Setting: 2000Hz (NiKo's personal configuration)
- Wireless Efficiency: 63% more efficient than Gen-1
- Input Latency: 37% lower than Razer DeathAdder V3 Pro generation
- Wired Mode: Available via included USB-C cable with identical low latency
Switches and Buttons
- Main Switches: Razer Optical Mouse Switches Gen-4
- Switch Lifespan: 100 million clicks
- Scroll Wheel: Razer Optical Scroll Wheel (first on esports mice)
- Total Programmable Buttons: 6
- Onboard Profiles: 1 profile mirroring your last Razer Synapse configuration
Battery
- Battery Life at 1000Hz: Up to 150 hours (latest firmware)
- Battery Life at 2000Hz: Approximately 110 hours
- Battery Life at 8000Hz: Approximately 24 hours
- Charging Port: USB-C
- Charging Cable: Razer SpeedFlex USB-C (included)
- Wired Operation: Fully functional while charging
Physical Design
- Weight: 57 grams
- Shape: Right-handed ergonomic
- Length: 128 mm
- Grip Width: 68 mm
- Height: 44 mm
- Finish: Smooth-touch coating with NiKo Collection flame colorway
- Autograph: NiKo printed name on chassis
- Feet: Enlarged 100% PTFE glides
- LED Indicators: 3 configurable LEDs for battery, connection, polling rate, or DPI
Software
- Configuration Software: Razer Synapse 4
- Customization Options: DPI curves, sensor tilt correction, lift-off distance, button remapping, polling rate per game
- DPI Migration: Precision DPI porting from competing mice
Connectivity and Compatibility
- Connection: Wireless via HyperPolling Dongle, or wired via USB-C
- Platform: Windows 10/11 required for Razer Synapse
- Mac Support: Basic functionality on macOS (no Synapse customization)
Package Contents
- Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro Niko Edition mouse
- Razer HyperPolling Wireless Dongle
- USB-C to USB-A Razer SpeedFlex charging cable
- USB-C dongle extender adapter
- Quick start guide
- NiKo Collection branded packaging with certificate
1 Year Warranty
Available now in Nairobi at Mascom International — Kenya's trusted source for competitive esports hardware. Test the 57g weight in your actual palm grip, feel the optical scroll wheel's notched click, and see the NiKo Collection flame colorway in person at our shop located at Old Mutual Building, First Floor Room 4, Kimathi Street, Nairobi CBD, or order through our countrywide delivery service with payment on arrival anywhere in Kenya. Delivery reaches Mombasa, Kisumu, Nakuru, Eldoret, and Nyeri within 1 business day, with all other counties receiving their Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro Niko Edition within 2-3 business days. Call +254 708 852 521, email info@mascomintl.com, or visit www.mascomintl.com to confirm current stock and place your order. Unlike other electronics retailers in Kenya, Mascom International stocks genuine Razer peripherals with verified serial numbers, full 2-year manufacturer warranty coverage, and support from staff who actually understand competitive CS2 and Valorant hardware requirements — so you get honest guidance on whether this mouse fits your grip style and playstyle before you buy.
Disclaimer: We can not guarantee that the information on this product is 100% correct
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