
If you’ve ever blamed a lost gunfight on your controller, Asus wants that excuse gone. The company just revealed the ROG Raikiri II Pro, and it’s chasing one thing above all else: raw responsiveness.
Price: TBD
Where to Buy: Asus
This is the elite tier of Asus’s controller line, sitting above the Raikiri II Xbox that shipped in late 2025. It’s for PC players who care about polling rates and latency the way audiophiles care about sample rates. Here’s what Asus confirmed, and what’s still a question mark.
What Asus just announced
The Raikiri II Pro is the new flagship of Asus’s controller family, pitched as the company’s most competition-ready pad yet. It’s hardware tuned for players who obsess over how fast their inputs land.
The headline specs are a competition-grade 8000Hz polling rate, 2.4GHz wireless tuned by ROG SpeedNova, and up to 79 hours of battery per charge. A full-color screen sits on the front face, too.
On the hardware side, you get hot-swappable TMR joysticks, dual-mode triggers, two extra bumpers, and four removable rear buttons, all remappable to whatever you’re playing. It connects wired, over 2.4GHz, or via Bluetooth, and it’s built for Windows 11.
Why the 8000Hz polling rate matters
Polling rate is how often the controller tells your PC where the sticks and buttons are. Most pads report at 1000Hz, once every millisecond, which is already quick. The Raikiri II Pro reports eight times as often, shaving input lag to a sliver.

Will you feel all of it? Not on a casual co-op night. But if you grind ranked shooters or fighting games, that tighter window is the edge you notice when a match gets close.
The full-color screen changes the small stuff
The older Raikiri Pro shipped with a tiny monochrome OLED strip. The II Pro upgrades that to a full-color panel built into the front of the controller.
You can switch between five saved profiles on the fly, check battery, or glance at your setup without alt-tabbing out of a game. It’s a quality-of-life touch that sounds minor until you live with it.

Asus pairs the II Pro with its Gear Link software for deeper button remapping, joystick sensitivity, and a Turbo mode that auto-repeats a held button. Armoury Crate is only along for Aura Sync lighting.
The 79-hour battery is the quiet flex
Battery is where the II Pro pulls away. Asus quotes up to 79 hours per charge, towering over the 50 on the Raikiri II Xbox and the roughly 48 on the older Raikiri Pro.
That 79-hour figure is rated at the 1000Hz polling rate with the panel, lighting, and vibration switched off, so running the full 8000Hz with everything on will pull it down. Even so, you’re charging about once a week instead of every couple of days.
How it stacks up against the other Raikiri pads
Asus now has three Raikiri options, and they don’t overlap as much as the names suggest. The original Raikiri Pro is the aging PC pad with the small OLED and tri-mode connectivity.

The Raikiri II Xbox is the Xbox-certified model from late 2025, with TMR sticks, a 1000Hz polling rate, 50 hours of battery, and a street price around $150 to $190.
The II Pro sits on top for PC players, trading Xbox certification for the 8000Hz ceiling, color screen, and bigger battery. Console-first players should stick with the Xbox model.
Who should buy it and who should wait
This one’s aimed at PC players who treat their controller like competitive gear. If you play ranked shooters, fighters, or racing sims and already fuss over latency, it’s built for you.
Everyone else can wait. If you game mostly on Xbox or you’re happy with a 50-hour pad, the Raikiri II Xbox or a good first-party controller covers the basics for less.
Strengths and trade-offs
On paper, this is a clear step up for competitive PC players. The speed and endurance are the real draws, and no other pad in the Raikiri line matches both at once.
The color screen and modular hardware turn a good controller into one you keep tuning. How much that matters comes down to how deep you like to go.
The one real limitation is focus. This is a PC-first pad, so anyone playing mostly on console gives up little by sticking with the Xbox model, but for its target player there’s little to fault.
Price and availability
Here’s the catch: Asus confirmed the Raikiri II Pro but says pricing is coming soon, so there’s no official number yet. For context, the Raikiri II Xbox launched around $189.99 and the older Raikiri Pro still hovers near $150. A flagship with an 8000Hz ceiling and a color screen will likely land at or above that, but treat it as a guess until Asus says so.
Price: TBD
Where to Buy: Asus
The bottom line
The ROG Raikiri II Pro is Asus swinging for the enthusiast crown, and on paper it connects. An 8000Hz polling rate, 79 hours of battery, and a color screen make it one of the most feature-dense PC pads announced this year.
The missing price is the only thing keeping this from a clear recommendation. If Asus lands it in a sensible range, it could be the PC pad to beat in 2026.

