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Superchatmousev100 May 2026

According to the few surviving archives (mostly cached pages from a now-defunct Singaporean electronics distributor), the SuperChatMouse V100 was “launched” in late 2021. Its purported manufacturer was a shell company called Infinite Input Dynamics (IID), which had no prior history, no website beyond a single landing page, and a customer support email that bounced within six months of release.

The pitch was simple yet absurd: a computer mouse that physically transforms based on live stream donations.

The V100 was not a mouse with extra buttons. It was a mouse designed specifically for YouTube Live and Twitch. It featured a 12,000 DPI optical sensor, five programmable buttons, and a small, grayscale LCD screen on the palm rest. So far, standard. The “superchat” element came from three features: superchatmousev100

Only 500 units were ever produced. Possibly fewer.

To evaluate the SuperChatMouseV100, we ran a two-week stress test during live streams averaging 500 concurrent viewers, with a heavy volume of Super Chats and chat messages. According to the few surviving archives (mostly cached

At first glance, it looks like a slightly chunky ergonomic mouse. But look closer. The V100 replaces the standard side buttons with a tactile 6-key macro keypad and integrates a noise-canceling microphone array into the left-click housing.

Yes, you read that right. Your mouse is also a headset. Only 500 units were ever produced

The true legend of the SuperChatMouse V100, however, lies not in its hardware, but in its software. The V100 required a proprietary driver: IID Synapse Core v1.0. This driver was unsigned, required kernel-level access, and—according to a 2023 analysis by a cybersecurity firm hired by a paranoid e-sports organization—contained code that would “periodically simulate mouse movements of +/- 2 pixels every 47 seconds when no user input was detected.”

Why? No one knows. Theories abound:

The driver’s EULA (a staggering 47 pages long) contained a clause buried in Section 12, Subsection 8: “User acknowledges that IID may, at its sole discretion, modulate cursor acceleration curves based on the emotional valence of chat messages as parsed by local machine learning models.” In plain English: the mouse would change its sensitivity based on how angry your chat was.

Users reported that when Twitch chat started spamming “L” or “Clown,” the V100’s DPI would suddenly drop to 200, making it feel like dragging the cursor through cold honey. When chat spammed “Pog,” the DPI would spike to 12,000, rendering the mouse uncontrollable.

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