So imagine you’re sitting in a crowded metro in the middle of summer, sweating through your shirt, while your friend next to you is hunched over a laptop trying to clutch a ranked FPS match on their lunch break. You’ve both got problems. And weirdly, two products launched in early 2026 seem tailor-made for exactly those two people.

Let’s talk about them.

The Dyson HushJet Mini Cool — A Fan That Actually Makes Sense

Okay, hand-held fans have always felt a bit gimmicky, right? You picture those cheap plastic things that die after a week. The HushJet Mini Cool is not that.

Dyson took their bladeless tech — the same DNA as their tower fans — and crammed it into something you can hold in one hand or hang around your neck. It weighs just 212 grams, which is roughly the weight of a large apple, and it’s only 38mm thick. Slip it in your bag and you’d barely notice it’s there.

What makes it interesting is this thing called a HushJet nozzle. Instead of just blasting air at your face, it shapes and focuses the airflow so it hits efficiently — like the difference between spraying water everywhere versus a tight stream from a hose. It pushes air at up to 25 metres per second, which is genuinely fast, and it does it without sounding like a hairdryer. At its lowest setting it runs at 52 dBA — quieter than most office conversations. Even at full Boost mode, it tops out at 72.5 dBA, which is loud but manageable.

You get five speed settings plus that Boost mode, and here’s where it gets clever — it works in three totally different ways. Hold it in your hand, pop it on the included desk stand, or clip it into the magnetic neck dock and go completely hands-free. That last one is genuinely useful if you’re commuting, cooking, or just need to cool down while doing something else. Add IPX4 water resistance and a 5,000mAh battery that lasts six hours (charging back up in about three), and this becomes a legitimately practical everyday carry. It’s priced around Rs.8,000–9,000 in India, which feels fair for what Dyson is offering here.

The Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike — When a Mouse Becomes an Experience

Now flip the script completely. The Logitech G Pro X2 Superstrike is not solving a physical comfort problem — it’s solving a competitive edge problem.

Here’s the big idea: traditional mouse clicks use mechanical switches. They click, they register, they wear out over time. Logitech threw that whole system out and built something called H.I.T.S. — Haptic Inductive Trigger System. Instead of a physical switch, an inductive coil senses how far down you’re pressing. You decide how light or heavy that actuation feels — across ten different levels — and a small haptic motor gives you tactile feedback so it still feels like a real click. The result? About 30 milliseconds faster response than mechanical switches, which in competitive gaming is genuinely significant.

It also supports Rapid Trigger, which means the mouse resets the moment you release, with no deadzone. For FPS players, that’s huge — especially for techniques like bunny hopping, which even has a dedicated BHOP mode built into the G HUB software.

Under the hood, the HERO 2 sensor goes up to 44,000 DPI with 888 IPS tracking speed — numbers that are effectively overkill for anyone below pro level, but they ensure zero performance ceiling. The mouse connects wirelessly at up to 8KHz polling (0.125ms latency), and the battery lasts 90 hours. It weighs just 61 grams and fits the familiar Pro X Superlight shape that competitive players already love.

The catch? It’s priced at Rs.23,995 in India. That’s a lot of money for a mouse, full stop. But if you are serious about competitive play, the haptic system genuinely changes how clicking feels — less fatigue, more precision.

So Who Wins?

Neither, really — they’re solving completely different lives. If you’re constantly battling Indian summer heat on the go, the HushJet Mini Cool is a surprisingly thoughtful piece of kit at a reasonable price. If you live inside FPS lobbies and want every millisecond to count, the Superstrike is as future-forward as gaming mice get right now.