Digest • Saturday, November 15, 2025

Weekly News Digest: A Cyan Mouse and Robot Bug Hunters

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Digest updates

Another week, another exercise in asking yourself: “Did they really think this was news?” This week we got a mouse in a different color and Razer teaching robots to find bugs that humans missed.

Logitech Paints a Mouse Blue, Calls It Innovation

The PRO X SUPERLIGHT 2 CYAN is here, and it is—wait for it—the same mouse as the PRO X SUPERLIGHT 2, but in cyan. That’s it. That’s the news.

To be fair, it is a genuinely great mouse. 60 grams, 44,000 DPI, 8kHz polling rate, LIGHTFORCE switches. All the specs that made it an esports staple are intact. But let’s call this what it is: a color variant designed to separate collectors from $179.99.

Logitech’s General Manager claims cyan “represents energy, focus, and individuality.” I claim it represents the color theory equivalent of printing money. The limited edition nature means you’ll see it resold for $400 within a month. If you need the best gaming mouse and cyan matches your RGB setup, congratulations. Everyone else can continue using the black one.

Original Source | Product Page

Razer Trains AI to Find Game Bugs

In actually useful news, Razer QA Co-AI is now available on the AWS Marketplace. This is an AI-powered quality assurance tool that automates bug detection during game development, and it’s the first product in Razer’s new “Co-AI” suite.

The tool reportedly reduces testing time by up to 40% by detecting performance bugs, generating reports automatically, and pushing them directly to JIRA. It’s been beta tested by over 50 game studios, from AAA to indie teams. If you’ve ever wondered why your favorite game shipped with obvious bugs, well, maybe now they’ll have fewer excuses.

This is Razer pivoting from “gaming lifestyle” to “enterprise developer tools,” which is either a smart diversification or a sign that selling RGB everything has limits. Either way, it’s genuinely more interesting than another press release about a new keyboard color.

Original Source | Product Page


That’s the week. One color variant and one enterprise tool. See you next time, when presumably someone will announce a “limited edition titanium” version of an existing product.