Appleâs Magic Mouse doesnât deserve the name. | Photo by Nick Statt / The Verge
And it hasnât changed since 2017
We may never know why Apple doggedly insists on you charging its mouse upside down, like a beetle with its legs in the air, year after year after year.
But I do know this: if you want a mouse that actually feels magical, price be damned, Logitech has the gadget for you.
When I want to charge my wireless mouse now, I donât need to plug in a cord or place it on a dock. In fact, I donât think about charging at all. It just… does. Because this past Christmas, a very generous brother-in-law effectively bought me a wireless mouse that charges itself.
Photo by Sean Hollister / The Verge
Logitech Powerplay, with G502 Lightspeed mouse.
What youâre looking at here is the Logitech Powerplay Wireless Charging System, effectively a mousepad with a wireless charger that magnetically beams electricity to a special puck. Logitechâs been selling it since 2017 â nearly as long as Apple has subjected us to the upside-down beetle.
To give you an idea, here is the complete description of what I did once I received this product:
Opened the packaging
Placed the charging slab on my desk
Plopped an included soft cloth mousepad on top
Removed my Logitech G502 Lightspeed mouseâs wireless USB dongle from my PC
Plugged in the Powerplayâs USB cable instead
Snapped the magnetic puck into the bottom of my mouse
Switched the mouse off and on
And then, I never thought about charging my mouse again. Not until this very story.
Seriously, itâs been three months, and Iâve never had to lift a finger â because it charges all by itself. Always. Automatically. Just by being on the mousepad.
Magic.
Image: Logitech
This is literally the entire setup instructions.
I have never reviewed a perfect product before, and Iâm not saying this is one â Iâd hate to jinx myself. Particularly when some customers do claim their mice eventually stopped charging or that the mousepad peeled apart and had to be taped or glued. Plus, itâs incredibly pricey at $120 for the mousepad alone, no mouse included. And no, it doesnât double as a phone charger or use Qi: it only works with its own magnetic puck, which only fits into a handful of the priciest Logitech mice, including the G502 Lightspeed, G703, G903, G Pro Wireless and G Pro X Superlight.
Still, it carries a 4.7-star rating on Amazon with surprisingly few negative reviews. The most common complaint is that nearby speakers or headphones can pick up a hum when itâs charging, and I havenât noticed that myself.
What I have noticed so far is that thereâs nothing to notice. It just works. No disconnects, no on-off switches, nothing to adjust. It is true that the charging coil doesnât cover the entire mousepad, but Iâve never had to think about it, never come back to a dead mouse. Itâs always sprung to life every morning at work and every evening I game.
Photo by Sean Hollister / The Verge
Some users have DIYâd the Powerplay into larger mousepads, but this is the only size Logitech sells.
It probably doesnât hurt that Iâm using it with the Logitech G502 Lightspeed, our pick for the best wireless gaming mouse, whose comfortable grip, loads of well-placed clicky buttons, incredible performance and adjustable weight put it head and shoulders over the also-excellent, also-wireless Razer Mamba and Logitech G900 I owned before. But thatâs a $140 mouse, and thereâs no discount on a bundle with both. Even the least expensive compatible mouse, the G703 Lightspeed, will typically cost you $70 on sale â and the Powerplay charging pad rarely goes on sale at all.
But you could do what I did: get the mouse, use it until the battery bugs you, and then add Powerplay. (Find a generous brother-in-law while youâre at it, too.)
That was kind of the idea, recalls Andrew Coonrad, who was technical marketing manager on Powerplay (and wrote the reviewerâs guide) back in 2017. It was designed to be the ultimate solution for demanding gamers willing to spend extra to solve charging once and for all.
At the time, there was still a stigma against wireless gaming mice, and battery life was part of that â while the Razer Mamba and Logitech G900 convinced me that low-latency gaming was possible over wireless, neither could hold much of a charge after a couple years of use. With the G900, Coonrad says thatâs because while its PMW3366 sensor was capable, it used an order of magnitude more energy than Logitechâs newer Hero sensors.
Photo by Amelia Holowaty Krales / The Verge
The Logitech G900, with play-and-charge cable inserted.
While it was developing Hero, Logitech also looked at wireless charging â but at first, it didnât like what it saw. Qi wireless charging meant keeping your mouse in a fixed spot. Same with wireless charging cradles like this HyperX. Razer and Mad Catz eventually put instant-charge supercapacitors in some ill-fated mice, but that meant they stopped working if you removed them from their charging pads, and those pads and mice had to be sold as a pricy set. âWe wanted to create a modular solution,â says Coonrad.
So Logitech charged its R&D lab in Lausanne, Switzerland, with that idea, and they came up with a set of loop antennas that could slowly charge the mouse â think days, not hours â even while youâre moving it around.
âI called it the dogbone when I first saw it,â says Coonrad, who took a trip to the R&D facility during development. âThey were like, âYes, but itâs because of the way the concentric fields overlap that creates that hotspot in the middle.â The entire pad can be covered because of those lobes.â
âItâs basically just a giant modular, movable transformer,â he explains. âYou have that smaller winding coil that transfers to the higher winding coil, and the field is wide enough that the energy charge is always more than the total energy of the mouse.â
According to an FCC filing, it operates at 6.78MHz, the same as the old A4WP / Rezence standard that fell by the wayside once Samsung and Apple gave Qi the nod instead. Coonrad wouldnât say how much credit Logitechâs partners might deserve: for instance, both the charging pad and the transmitter circuit board are labeled LG Innotek, though itâs possible it just served as manufacturer.
The other thing I find interesting about the Powerplay mousepad is that itâs not just a charger. It also doubles as the wireless receiver for the mouse, so you donât need to leave the mouse dongle plugged into your PC anymore â I keep it inside the mouse for easy grab-and-go. The FCC filing shows thereâs a full 32MHz Arm Cortex-M3 computer and a working Bluetooth antenna inside there â though Coonrad suspects the Bluetooth was never actually used. He says itâs not a functional part of the final product, and Logitech uses its own proprietary 2.4GHz âLightspeedâ wireless stack to connect to the mouse instead.
Image via FCC
The Arm chip inside the Logitech Powerplayâs receiver module.
But, to me, the most unusual thing about the Powerplay system is how long itâs stuck around without fanfare â even the packaging hasnât changed since 2017. Does this product actually sell? Coonrad says it does, that âpeople buy them like crazy,â and it helps that the compatible G502 Lightspeed, G Pro Wireless, and G Pro Wireless Superlight are becoming its most popular mice of all time. But he canât share sales numbers. And he also admits that he doesnât use them himself, but rather the smaller G305 that doesnât have a space for a Powerplay puck. Instead of a wireless charging mousepad, he keeps a box of Energizers under his desk. âIt pisses me off once every six to eight months.â
By and large, gaming mouse battery life has significantly improved since 2017, with the recent G Pro X Superlight boasting 70 hours a charge, compared to 60 hours for the previous generation, which itself was double that of the generation before. Less feature-filled mice â like Coonradâs G305 and mice from competitors â can easily cross the 200-hour mark now.
Says Coonrad: âIf this is so awesome, why isnât Logitech making a bigger stink about it? The war on wireless is won.â
In 2022, you most definitely do not need to spend hundreds of dollars just to get a wireless mouse that doesnât die every week. But itâs nowhere near as magical as never needing to charge at all.