




🖱️ Elevate your workflow with precision, comfort, and wireless freedom — because your wrist deserves the best.
The cityergonomics DXT02W is a rechargeable wireless vertical mouse designed by UK physiotherapists to reduce wrist strain through a natural, vertical grip. Featuring four adjustable DPI speeds, ambidextrous use with instant switching, and a long-lasting battery that supports up to two weeks per charge with rapid quick-charge capability, it combines ergonomic innovation with reliable wireless performance for professional users seeking comfort and precision.









| ASIN | B00EZOO8VE |
| Are Batteries Included | Yes |
| Average Battery Life (in hours) | 3 months |
| Batteries | 1 Lithium Ion batteries required. (included) |
| Best Sellers Rank | 71,287 in Computers & Accessories ( See Top 100 in Computers & Accessories ) 1,520 in Mice |
| Brand | Kinesis |
| Colour | Grey, Silver |
| Customer Reviews | 3.5 3.5 out of 5 stars (101) |
| Date First Available | 28 Aug. 2013 |
| Delivery information | We cannot deliver certain products outside mainland UK ( Details ). We will only be able to confirm if this product can be delivered to your chosen address when you enter your delivery address at checkout. |
| Guaranteed software updates until | unknown |
| Hardware Platform | Personal Computer |
| Item Weight | 90.7 g |
| Item model number | PD7DXT-WR |
| Lithium Battery Energy Content | 3.7 Watt Hours |
| Lithium Battery Packaging | Batteries packed with equipment |
| Lithium Battery Weight | 4 Grams |
| Manufacturer | cityergonomics |
| Number Of Lithium Ion Cells | 1 |
| Operating System | Linux, Windows 7, Windows XP |
| Power Source | Battery Powered,Corded Electric |
| Product Dimensions | 10.41 x 10.16 x 6.1 cm; 90.72 g |
| Series | DXT02W |
T**M
Comfotable but still expensive (Value for money) ... UPDATE Jun 2016
Hugely annoyed. 1 year and five days since spending £100 on my second DXT mouse and it has done the same as the last DXT mouse I bought .... stopped working! These mice are very comfortable to use but tend to be quite quirky and not particularly accurate to use at times. However, as the best shape to relieve repetitive use issues I stuck with it. But , two mice in two years?? That's £200 on mice! I will replace with another brand as many more now available. Very unreliable, great pity. Update Jan 2016. I had not noticed that DXT customer services had commented on this review until the end of 2015. I got back to them and was very pleasantly surprised by quality of customer care and their speed of service. Even though it was 18 months since purchase and 6 months post writing the review, a new MkII mouse arrived the next day. I'm very impressed with the upgrade and had forgotten how comfortable they are to use. Two weeks into the MkII and I'm absolutely delighted, I've tried six (yes six!) different ergonomic mice in the last 6 months and non have come close to the DXT, my RSI has almost disappeared in only two weeks after returning with a vengeance after using the other devices. Thank you DXT. I've upgraded your stars from one to three as it was reliability that I had an issue with. Once this mouse passes the 12 month mark I'll definitely upgrade you to five as the mouse and the quality of service from DXT most definitely deserve them. UPDATE June 2016 I said I'd see how the reliability goes and to date all of my issues with the earlier version of this are no longer an issue. Battery life, responsiveness and reliability issues I had with previous versions have all gone. As has my RSI... Completely. Still expensive but worth every penny. At least the quality now matches the price tag. Customer service is top notch if you have any issues.
J**M
Light and fast, perfect
I was using a DXT mouse (wired version) for several years. It was a real workhorse and was brilliant. I never looked back after the wrist benefits. Downside of the wired one was that the cable was vulnerable when wrapped up to travel. Eventually the scroll wheel went iffy, so 5 years on I have bought a wireless one. The bluetooth version is just as good, smooth and fast and with the right speed setting (adjustable) there is no need to move my arm or even the "heel" of my hand at all, just fingertips. I don't find any problems using it whilst charging, the cable is just out of the way nicely. I use it every day and it often goes weeks. In fact I have never run out of charge, but I plug it in occasionally if I think about it. It goes to sleep in some way also, hence there's no need to switch it on and off. After a cold start of the computer, just wiggle the mouse it and you're off again.
A**T
Good idea but not great in practice.
Update: I decided to return the mouse as it kept "sticking" to links either text or image ones. I had to have a second mouse to "pull" the cursor off the link. I have been using the mouse for a week and it seems to be easing the fatigue in my wrist and elbow but not my shoulder. It also encouraged me to change the height of my seat. It takes some getting used to and the top button is the easiest to use. The scroll wheel is usable but a lot better backwards as you are pulling it into your grip. The lower mouse button is taking longer to perfect as I tended to jerk the mouse when I use it. It is not very accurate and when working with documents I click somewhere close to where I want then move the curser with the keyboard arrows. The mouse also gets stuck which is strange; dragging and dropping photos in one case. The cursor can go “missing”; I have to move the mouse around a lot to “find” it. I prefer to have my index finger flat across the face of the mouse to operate the top button and use the last joint on my index finger for the bottom button. I find it more accurate and comfortable this way than the “pinch grip” but then the scroll wheel is too far back and the buttons also seem to far down the body; in my case would be better about 5mm higher. It is still not as fluid as a flat mouse but again that may improve with practice. It seems well made and has a nice weight. Worth over £100? If it stops the fatigue in my wrist and elbow yes; but time will tell.
G**G
Wont connect anymore, sticky surface, no online support
Product website is frozen since 2016, not easy to find pairing software which when installed didnt work anyway. Surface has become very sticky as the plastic has perished. Worked for about a year but I am very uncertain as to its support for Win10 as the software didnt seem compatible with it. I couldn't get mouse to work anymore in any case and I work in IT. You would need to be ergonomically desperate (as I was) to buy this (it was neat and compact too which I liked) - thankfully other products are now available (e.g. websearch for "best vertical mice 2019") and even though some are larger a mouse that works is always better than one that doesn't.
F**H
La prise en main est assez rapide pour une première souris verticale, 2-3 jours pour ma part, elle est fine et légère ce qui est bien. Après 6 mois d'utilisation, je ne met pas 5 étoiles car 2 choses. Le plastique gris plus foncé s'use et devient "râpeux" au niveau du pouce (car toujours au même endroit). On distingue également un affaiblissement de la batterie en terme de longévité, en 6 mois je dirais que les fréquences de recharge s'accélèrent, même si j'ai du la recharger 6 ou 7 fois, ce qui est quand même pas mal en terme d'autonomie pour une utilisation intensive au travail. Et pour le concept de la souris verticale, pour ma part je sens qu'au niveau du poignet ça va mieux, d'où mon second achat. # # Mise à jour après 1 an et demi d'utilisation ####### Je possède 2 exemplaires de cette souris (boulot/perso) et l'une d'elles commence à avoir une défaillance sur le clique de la molette : - Le clique molette marche 1 fois sur 3 - Quand le clique marche, 1 fois sur 2 le clique est compté 3 fois, par exemple, dans google chrome pour ouvrir un lien dans un nouvel onglet ça l'ouvre 3 fois... Donc je me demande s'il n'y a pas une garantie car cela devient très pénible à utilisation quotidienne. Et comme elle est déjà très chère c'est difficilement envisageable d'en racheter une autre. J'enlève donc 1 étoile... à suivre.
A**R
This is a VERY expensive tiny mouse with some good benefits. It is a uniquely small, light, vertical, fingertip operated mouse. It took me some time to get used to working withOUT a horizontal scroll or Prev/Next web page buttons. I often used those when web browsing but now must use the onscreen or keyboard controls -- not a big deal. This mouse only has the two mouse buttons with a scroll wheel/button between them. The thumb position has plenty of room for above/below controls and the finger side has solid spots to provide opposing pressure to thumb button presses. The minimum button layout It's symmetrical design works with either hand. The one design for both hands is not perfect for either lefties or righties. The mouse buttons are okay as you can work out a comfortable finger position where left and right clicks can become automatic. But your fingers are at an angle which does not matter much for the buttons but what about the scroll wheel? The scroll wheel is only halfway lined up with your fingers. The wheel has to be neutral for both lefties and righties so it cannot line up with the fingers of either. I am not sure I will ever get completely comfortable operating the scroll wheel at a diagonal finger angle. There must be a significant cost savings for the minimalist design. There is no need for special driver software, with minimal buttons, and it is a single lefty/righty design. But even though the customer must deal with the lefty/righty ergonomic compromise and learn how to integrate with minimal buttons, they still must pay a premium price. This irks me, as I feel as though there is price gouging going on here, taking advantage of a vertical mouse frenzy. The mouse is tiny and vertical requiring mostly, tiny finger motion and a tiny desktop space. It is too small to support your hand so I have an initial problem with pain where the side of my wrist must rest on the desk. I am still working on finding a forearm/wrist support that is the most comfortable. Since neither the forearm or wrist need to move, I will probably succeed. Using the mouse at the edge of the desk so the middle-bottom of my hand rests down across the desk's edge seems to work pretty well. PROs: Very Small -- like the smallest flat travel mouse but it stands on end so takes up even less horizontal space. ... used with a very light hold between your thumb and finger tips. Tiny Workspace -- motion mostly restricted to fingers, minimizes hand/wrist movement, ... tiny desk space needed, only a bit larger than the mouse itself. Battery Life -- lithium rechargeable, easy to use while recharging via USB cable, ... so far, I have logged a full week of hard use after a full charge. It does a hard-sleep after an idle period, ... I thought I'd hate, but now love "click to wake", my brain was readily trained ... I intuitively learned the idle time, so simply click proactively instead of hunting for a dead cursor. ... clicking to wake allows for a "hard-sleep" saving energy as opposed to always being alert for motion. Ergonomics: Good. It does get your wrist into a natural vertical orientation ... and usage motion is very concentrated on just the fingers with very little wrist action. CONS: PRICE -- is high (mine was $99 circa Oct-2019) Minimal buttons -- No horizontal scroll or prev/next web page buttons even though there IS room for them. Ergonomics -- the design to work for both righty AND lefty puts scroll wheel at a diagonal to finger angle, ... small size is making it difficult for me to find and adapt to a comfortable support position for my wrist I almost sent this back based on price gouging principles but I'm glad I gave it more time. I feel as though I may be able to adjust to the minimal buttons and crooked scroll wheel and find a good support position for my wrist/forearm. I REALLY appreciate the tiny size and footprint combined with the vertical form factor. They could do better with the same size/footprint with a couple of thumb buttons(or/and horizontal scroll wheel) and even better yet, dedicated independent lefty and righty designs.
A**R
I am 5'2" tall, and my hands are proportionately small. This mouse works for me. I've only had it for a week, so I am still adjusting a bit, but the transition has been pretty smooth.
B**M
Wir mussten ein Reihe von diesen ergonomischen Mäusen ausprobieren, bis wir diese fanden, mit der meine Frau wirklich klar kam. Das macht die anderen Produkte jetzt nicht gut oder schlecht, es hängt viel vom individuellen Problem ab, mit welcher der verschiedenen Produkte man am Besten klar kommt. (An dieser Stelle ein dickes Lob an Amazon und den Prime Service und die problemlose Rücknahme der weniger geeigneten Produkte). Meine Frau hat mehrere Jahr einen Wow Pen genutzt, bis dieser den Geist aufgab. Das Nachfolgemodell ist leider dicker und schwerer und war nicht geeignet. Der Penclick ist leicht und schlank aber die Konstruktion ist etwas gewöhnungsbedürftig. Diese Maus hier ist sehr überzeugend. Man merkt sofort die hochwertige Verarbeitung. Sehr durchdachte Konstruktion. Die Tasten z.B. laufen über die gesamte Breite. Man kann also irgendwo klicken und muß nicht eine kleine taste suchen. Die Nutzung per Funk ist stabil und zuverlässig. Es ist übrigens KEINE Wlan Maus, wie die Produktbezeichnung suggeriert. Die Maus kommt mit einem kleinen USB Empfänger, die in den PC oder Laptop eingesteckt wird und die Verbindung baut sich automatisch auf. Das Aufladen geh sehr schnell (auch über einen USB Anschluß) und reicht dann für mehrere Wochen. Man kann während des Ladens arbeiten. Natürlich ist das Produkt sehr teuer aber es hat auch einiges zu bieten. In meiner persönlichen Rangfolge liegt bei den die vier Mäusen, die wir probiert haben, diese hier bzgl. Qualität mit großem Abstand auf Platz 1. Danach käme der neue Wow Pen, gefolgt von dem alten Wow Pen und dem Penclick. Das gesagt muß diese Maus aber nicht die Beste sein, je nachdem welche Beschwerden man hat. Hier geht die Entscheidung nur über ausprobieren.
J**A
Me gusta mucho este ratón por lo cómodo que es para la mano, pues me paso muchas horas trabajando con el y evita que me duela. Tenía la versión con cable pero se me acabó estropeando al año porque el cable es muy finito, asi que por eso compré el inalámbrico. La única pega es que la carga dura sólo 2 semanas, pero me parece un mal menor dado lo cómodo que es el ratón. Lo seguiré comprando hasta que encuentre uno más cómodo.
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