Corsair iCUE Software & Lighting
Like any Corsair gaming product, the M75 Wireless is compatible with iCUE and that is where you’ll do all of your customization. Opening up iCUE you should see both the M75 Wireless and the receiver listed.
Clicking into the Key Assignments we can reprogram all of the buttons on the mouse except the main left click button. You can remap to a keyboard key, mouse buttons, media controls, launch applications, profile switch, and you get a full macro editor. You can also set hardware key assignments that can be used when you connect to a PC that does not have iCUE installed.
After key assignments we do have lighting effects. There are two lighting zones on the mouse (logo & bottom). There are a handful of different effects you can choose from. Just like the key assignments there is also hardware lighting.
When it comes to the lighting you get lighting on the main Corsair logo on the palm rest and on the bottom of the mouse. It does look good and is not overpowering.
After lighting we have DPI. Here you can set 5 different DPI stages as well as Sniper stage. DPI levels can be set in 1 DPI increments and you can adjust the X and Y axis independently.
Surface Calibration allows you to calibrate the mouse to your gaming surface. You will need to connect the mouse to the USB cable to do this though.
Device settings has quite a lot of options in it and I wish it wasn’t designed as a pop-up but rather organized on the open space you have within the application. Some things you may want to change here are enabling all side buttons (the two right buttons are disabled by default), enabling sleep mode, and setting your light-off height.
You can also click into the USB receiver and see what it is paired with as well as switch the polling rate. It is set to 1000 Hz by default.