Zeerkeer Ergonomic Vertical Gaming Mouse Review – Does It Actually Help?

Zeerkeer Ergonomic Vertical Mouse, RGB Wired Vertical Gaming Mouse with Joystick, 10000 Max DPI and 11 Programmable Buttons for Gamers, Computer (Wired)
Zeerkeer
- ★【Ergonomic Vertical Design】- Unlike those traditional mouse which strain wrist and arm over time, causing great pain, this vertical mouse is designed to help users reduce muscle strain and even eliminate the damage caused by traditional computer mice over the years.
- ★【11 Programmable Buttons】- This vertical gaming mouse has up to 11 programmable buttons. Support macro editing, you can customize all button functions through programming software to meet the various needs of different games.
- ★【5-way Joystick】- Integrated positioning operation. One rocker is equal to 5 keys. Thumb control to achieve "front, back, left, right, down" operation. Suitable for different types of games such as FPS, MOBA, MMO, etc.
- ★【High Precision, Best Gaming Experience】 - Equipped with PAW3325 10000 DPI game sensor, 100IPS, 20G acceleration, 5000FPS. This wired gaming mouse has incredible precision and speed. Give you excellent tracking sensitivity to get the most out of the most intense gameplay.
Quick Verdict
Pros
- Vertical design genuinely reduces wrist and forearm strain during extended sessions
- Thumb joystick adds four extra directional inputs without sacrificing grip
- PAW3325 sensor delivers smooth, consistent tracking up to 10000 DPI
- 11 programmable buttons with macro support cover most game and productivity needs
- RGB lighting is customisable and adds a clean aesthetic to the desk setup
Cons
- The 1.8m cable can tangle if you don't manage it — a bungee is practically mandatory
- Palm rest area is on the smaller side; larger-handed users may find it snug
- Thumb joystick placement takes roughly a week to stop accidentally triggering it
Quick Verdict
The Zeerkeer ergonomic vertical gaming mouse caught my eye because it tries to solve two problems most gaming peripherals ignore entirely: your wrist. It pairs a vertical body that genuinely reduces forearm strain with a PAW3325 sensor, a thumb joystick, and 11 programmable buttons. After two weeks of daily use — spreadsheets on Monday, three nights of League of Legends mid-week — I can say the ergonomics are real, the gaming performance is solid for the price, and the joystick is a genuinely useful addition rather than a gimmick. It earns a 4.2 out of 5 from me, with one foot still in "worth trying" territory. If you spend more than four hours a day at a desk and have ever felt that dull ache creeping up your forearm, this vertical mouse deserves a closer look.

What Is the Zeerkeer Ergonomic Vertical Gaming Mouse?
At its core, the Zeerkeer ergonomic vertical gaming mouse is a wired peripheral that holds your hand in a near-upright handshake position rather than the flat, pronated pose a standard mouse forces. That sounds like a small change — it is not. The moment you pick it up, the difference is immediate: your forearm muscles stop fighting gravity the way they do with a traditional mouse. The brand backs the design with a PAW3325 optical sensor capable of up to 10000 DPI, five adjustable sensitivity steps, and an integrated five-way thumb joystick on the left side.
The mouse connects via USB-A and draws power directly from your PC, so there are no batteries to manage and no wireless latency to worry about. The 1.8-metre braided cable is sturdy, though as a wired-only device it does demand some desk-tidying discipline. Eleven programmable buttons line the body — eight along the left edge and three near the scroll wheel — and all of them can be remapped or macro-assigned through the downloadable software.

Key Features
- Ergonomic vertical body reduces wrist pronation and forearm fatigue during long sessions
- PAW3325 optical sensor with five DPI levels from 1500 up to 10000 DPI
- Five-way thumb joystick: front, back, left, right, and down inputs via a single rocker
- Eleven programmable buttons with macro editing support through the Windows software
- RGB backlighting with adjustable modes, colours, and brightness via the driver
- USB-A wired connection for zero-latency performance and consistent tracking
- On-body DPI indicator using four LED dots to show the current sensitivity level
Hands-On Review
I unboxed the Zeerkeer on a Tuesday afternoon, peeled the protective film off the body — it had that faint new-plastic smell — and plugged it in. The first hour was genuinely uncomfortable. My hand did not know what to do with itself. By hour three, something shifted. The vertical grip started to feel less like a compromise and more like relief. By the end of day one, my usual afternoon wrist ache was noticeably muted. Will I keep using it? Probably — but with a caveat I'll get to shortly.
The sensor is a PAW3325, which sits in the mid-range of gaming optical sensors. In practice, the 10000 DPI ceiling is overkill for most players — I settled around 4000 DPI for daily work and 7000 for gaming and found both perfectly responsive. The 5000 FPS polling rate and 20G acceleration handled fast sweeps in-game without any visible jitter or acceleration artifacts. Tracking felt consistent on both my cloth mousepad and a harder poly surface.

The thumb joystick is the feature I was most skeptical about. It sits under the left thumb, slightly recessed, and the four directional inputs trigger with a short, tactile click. In League of Legends I mapped it to camera pan — a common use — and it worked well. In an FPS test, I assigned it to lean left and right. The response is snappy and does not interfere with the standard left-click and right-click ergonomics. The learning curve is real, though. I accidentally triggered the "down" input half a dozen times during the first two days before my thumb muscle memory caught up.
RGB lighting is present, adjustable through the driver, and bright enough to reflect on a light-coloured desk. You can turn it off entirely if you prefer a clean, office-friendly look. The braided cable held up fine during two weeks of daily plugging and unplugging at my desk — no fraying at the connector, which is where most budget cables fail first.
Who Should Buy It?
- Office workers or remote employees who log four or more hours at a PC daily and want to reduce wrist and forearm strain
- Casual to intermediate gamers who play MOBAs, MMOs, or RPGs and want extra binds without swapping hands off the mouse
- People with early-stage repetitive strain discomfort who want to try a vertical grip before committing to a full ergonomic peripheral overhaul
- Fans of the vertical mouse concept who have been waiting for a gaming-grade version with programmable buttons rather than a basic three-key design
Skip this if you need a featherweight competitive FPS mouse — at roughly 140 grams this is a medium-weight device, and the vertical shape adds a small amount of drag when you need to pick it up and reposition quickly. Also skip it if you exclusively use macOS for gaming, since macro software is Windows-only.
Alternatives Worth Considering
- Logitech MX Vertical — a stronger ergonomic pedigree with a 4000 DPI sensor, longer battery if you want wireless, and a more refined build quality. It costs more and lacks programmable gaming buttons.
- Anker Vertical Mouse — a budget-friendly alternative at roughly half the price with a basic ergonomic design. No joystick, no macro support, no RGB, and a lower-DPI sensor meant for productivity rather than gaming.
- Razer Naga Trinity — a top-tier gaming mouse with a 16-button side panel and modular grip system. It is symmetric rather than vertical, so it does not address wrist strain, but it wins on pure gaming customisation depth.
FAQ
The vertical design does reduce forearm pronation and wrist strain compared to standard mice, which can help people with mild repetitive-strain discomfort. It is not a medical device, but many users report fewer aches after switching. Severe or diagnosed conditions should still be reviewed by a professional.
Final Verdict
The Zeerkeer ergonomic vertical gaming mouse is not a perfect device, and I want to be honest about that. The cable needs managing, the thumb joystick takes practice, and the palm rest will feel small if you have larger hands. What surprised me was how quickly the vertical grip went from unfamiliar to genuinely comfortable — and how little I had to sacrifice in terms of gaming performance to get there. The PAW3325 sensor handles well, the programmable buttons add real utility, and the joystick is a thoughtful addition that rewards a short adjustment period. If you are looking for a mouse that respects both your long-term joint health and your gaming sessions without breaking the bank, the Zeerkeer ergonomic vertical gaming mouse is worth every cent.