
- The rotating mouse replaces the traditional mouse wheel with continuous movement
- The device claims faster navigation through documents and spreadsheets
- Users report smoother timeline cleaning in editing software
A mouse’s scroll wheel has barely changed in three decades, and most people no longer question whether it still works well.
However, a device called Rotary Mouse now claims it allows users to navigate documents, spreadsheets, and timelines at speeds that simple flipping simply can’t match.
The product pitch centers on a single mechanical exchange, replacing the familiar up-and-down movement of the wheel with a continuously rotating dial that the manufacturer says is more like turning a knob than clicking a switch.
A different movement, a different demand
According to the campaign, the rotary input allows users to scroll or navigate content up to 2.5 times faster than a standard mouse wheel, while also reducing the repetitive strain associated with constant tapping.
Instead of short up and down movements, users spin the wheel like a small knob, controlling speed and direction through pressure and movement.
The device still supports conventional vertical scrolling, which means users can switch between familiar typing and rotary control without switching devices or habits.
It measures 119mm by 64mm by 40mm in an ergonomic matte black shell, weighs just 59g without its battery, and supports 2.4GHz wireless connectivity.
The rotating mouse also features an optical sensor with switchable sensitivity settings of 800, 1200 and 1600 DPI, allowing users to fine-tune cursor speed and precision.
Its left and right buttons are silenced by a central button integrated into the rotary wheel itself.
The device comes with an AAA alkaline battery and a USB wireless receiver and works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS and Android.
Some testers describe the rotary mouse movement as smoother and easier to control, especially when trying to stop at specific points on a timeline or page.
The design also introduces tactile feedback via clicks when rotating, intended to help users maintain control during faster movements.
Early use cases and mixed reactions
Early users tested the device in video editing software where cleaning up the timeline is a frequent task requiring precise control and repeated movements.
In programs such as Adobe Premiere Pro and DaVinci Resolve, the mouse wheel is used as a cleanup tool, where rotating the wheel allows users to move through video timelines more smoothly than repeated scrolling.
In racing simulation setups, the same rotary input can be mapped directly to the steering control, turning the dial into a compact alternative to traditional wheels or keyboard-based steering.
This makes it useful in games such as Euro Truck Simulator 2, Assetto Corsa and BeamNG.drive, where progressive steering inputs are required and can be replicated via controlled rotation.
The concept has also gained attention online, with thousands of upvotes in communities of PC enthusiasts discussing alternative input devices and ergonomic design ideas.
Creator Melvin Wong, an electronics engineer with extensive experience in hardware development, says the idea came from reducing finger fatigue during long computing sessions.
Prototypes were built using 3D printing techniques before progressing to the first production units.
He claims that continuous rotation reduces repetitive effort while unexpectedly improving navigation speed in large digital workspaces during testing phases.
However, independent verification of claimed speed improvements remains limited and actual performance likely depends on user behavior and application type.
The Rotary Mouse is currently crowdfunding on Kickstarter, where it has raised $3,654 against a goal of $14,794 from 61 backers, with 18 days remaining in the campaign.
The team also says it has already sold over 30 pre-production Founder’s Edition units and is aiming to start shipping the final product by December 2026.
Disclaimer: We do not recommend or endorse any crowdfunding projects. All crowdfunding campaigns have inherent risks, including the possibility of delays, changes or non-delivery of products. Potential funders should carefully evaluate the details and proceed at their own discretion.
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