Razer's Summer Specials sale is live right now, and it's one of the better peripheral discounts the company has run in a while. Running from June 23 through June 26, the sale hits headsets hardest, with some discounts reaching 48% off. A handful of keyboards and mice round out the offers, and a few of them are genuinely hard to pass up at these prices.

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The headsets doing the heavy lifting
The Razer BlackShark V2 Pro is the headline deal here. Normally $300, it's down to $130, which is a 57% cut and the kind of price that makes it hard to justify not buying if you've been sitting on the fence. The BlackShark V2 Pro features 2.4GHz wireless, battery life in the 60-70 hour range depending on use, and a microphone that genuinely outperforms what most gaming headsets ship with. Voice reproduction is clear enough that teammates regularly ask what mic setup you're running. For competitive players who spend serious hours in comms, this is the standout deal of the entire sale.
The Razer Barracuda Pro drops from $250 to $130. It's a different kind of headset entirely, built more for the gamer who also commutes or works in a noisy office. Active noise cancellation, around 30 hours of battery life, and a design that doesn't scream "gaming peripheral" make it a versatile pick. The 2.4GHz wireless receiver is included, which matters given how many headsets at this price point ship with Bluetooth only.
Then there's the Razer Kraken Kitty V2, down from $100 to $80. Yes, it has cat ears with reactive RGB lighting. Yes, that's the whole point. It's USB-A wired only, so no wireless flexibility, but for streamers who want lighting that reacts to tips and chat triggers, there's nothing else quite like it. The audio hardware underneath is essentially the standard Kraken V2 spec: 7.1 virtual surround sound and an above-average microphone.
Keyboards worth the desk space
Two Huntsman keyboards are in the sale, aimed at very different setups.
The Razer Huntsman Mini at $75 (down from $130) is a 60% form factor, so no numpad, no dedicated function row, no arrow keys without hitting Fn. For anyone building a minimal desk setup or running a large mousepad, the compact footprint is the entire appeal. The switches are Razer's optical Linear Red, which feel close to traditional mechanical switches but with a slightly lighter bottom-out feel at the end of each keystroke.
The Razer Huntsman V3 Pro Tenkeyless is a more interesting piece of hardware at $160 (was $220). It drops the numpad but keeps the function row, and its analog-optical hybrid switches let you adjust key travel depth through Razer's software. Shallower actuation for faster inputs, deeper travel if you want more deliberate keystrokes. That kind of per-key customization is rare at this price point.
The mice: one obvious pick, one sleeper
The Razer Cobra Pro drops to $70 from $130. At 77 grams, it's built for players who cover a lot of mousepad, and the Focus Pro 30K optical sensor tracks accurately across most surfaces without any jitter. Ten programmable buttons and 11 RGB zones round it out, with 2.4GHz wireless, Bluetooth, and USB-C wired options all available.
The Razer Basilisk V3 X at $45 (was $70) is the quieter recommendation. It runs on a single AA battery, which Razer rates at nearly 300 hours of use. No charging cable required, no dead battery mid-session. It's right-handed only, supports 2.4GHz wireless and Bluetooth, and has nine programmable buttons. At $45, it's a legitimately good budget wireless mouse.
What the sale looks like at a glance
Before June 26 runs out
The sale closes on June 26, so there are only a couple of days left to move on any of these. The BlackShark V2 Pro at $130 is the most compelling single deal in the batch, but the Huntsman V3 Pro's analog switches make it worth a look for anyone who has never tried adjustable actuation depth. The Basilisk V3 X is the low-risk, high-value pick if you just need a reliable wireless mouse without the premium price tag.
For more gear coverage and game-specific tips, the gaming guides section has you covered while you wait for your new peripherals to arrive. Whether you're picking up the BlackShark V2 Pro for competitive sessions or grabbing the Basilisk V3 X as a backup, you'll want to check out our survival guide for I Hate This Place to put that new setup to immediate use. And if you're newer to the scene, the What Is This Sorcery starter tips guide is worth bookmarking for when your gear lands.








