Logitech has updated one of its best-known productivity tools with the MX Master 4, the latest version of a mouse line that has been evolving for more than 20 years. The new model keeps the familiar strengths that have made the MX Master range a reference point for work use, while adding a few notable changes aimed at comfort, longevity and feel.
The MX Master 4 continues Logitech’s focus on ergonomic design, quality materials and satisfying clicks. Like its predecessors, it is built for people who spend long hours at a desk and want a mouse that is precise, comfortable and packed with useful controls. Logitech has long positioned the MX Master as the mouse to beat for everything except hardcore PC gaming, and the fourth generation does not appear to move away from that formula.
One of the main updates is a new haptic motor, which introduces phone-like vibrations on the desktop. Logitech is also trying a different approach with this generation by adding a more tactile response to the mouse itself, giving the MX Master 4 a feature that goes beyond standard tracking, scrolling and button inputs. It is a notable shift for a product line better known for dependable refinement than experimentation.
The mouse also arrives with smoother materials and a repair-friendly design. Those changes suggest Logitech is thinking not just about how the device feels in the hand, but also about how it fits into a longer-term ownership experience. Repairability is an increasingly important selling point for many users, and it marks a practical addition to a mouse already aimed at serious everyday use.
As with earlier MX Master models, the latest version keeps the features that made the line stand out in the first place. Logitech has previously equipped the series with a magnetic free-spinning scroll wheel, plenty of buttons and precise tracking, all of which remain central to the appeal of the range. The MX Master 4 builds on that foundation rather than replacing it.
That balance between familiarity and novelty is what defines the new model. It still looks like an MX Master and still aims to be the default choice for office work, creative tasks and general productivity. But with haptic feedback and a repairable design now part of the package, Logitech is clearly trying to push the category forward without losing what made the mouse successful in the first place.
For users who want a premium work mouse, the MX Master 4 looks set to continue the lineage of a product that has been widely regarded as one of the best of its kind. It is an incremental update in some respects, but one that adds enough new ideas to keep the line fresh after two decades of development.
