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Xiaomi is accelerating hardware diversification, combining advanced peripherals, wellness devices, and manufacturing expansion. The company unveiled the Mijia Long-Handle Massage Gun 3 — a lightweight, ergonomic percussion massager with a 12 kg peak thrust, interchangeable heads, and long battery life — while also pushing into high-performance gaming with the Xiaomi Gaming Mouse 2 featuring a bespoke PixArt PAW3955XM sensor for pro-grade tracking and calibration. Behind the products, Xiaomi formed a new Beijing tech firm authorized to make batteries and motors, signaling moves toward vertical integration to secure components for future consumer, IoT and EV ambitions.
Xiaomi has opened free trial sign-ups for the Xiaomi Gaming Mouse 2 with only five slots available. The new mouse is a 58 g lightweight, ergonomically shaped gaming peripheral that uses a new PixArt flagship sensor (PAW-series) and a high-performance controller for fast response and precise tracking. It offers three-mode wireless connectivity, durable switches, a smooth scroll wheel, and a 530 mAh battery for extended play. Xiaomi will accept applications through its community app from May 5–12, 2026, announce testers on May 14, and ship samples May 15–16; selected testers must submit reviews by May 30. The launch highlights Xiaomi’s push into competitive gaming peripherals.
Xiaomi announced the Xiaomi Gaming Mouse 2 will ship with a bespoke PixArt flagship sensor, the PAW3955XM. Official specs shared include up to 40,000 DPI, 750 IPS tracking speed, 60G max acceleration, over 20,000 FPS static scan rate, 1% DPI accuracy and individual 1V1 factory calibration. Xiaomi says the mouse pairs the flagship sensor with a high-end MCU and esports-grade tuning; imagery shows a symmetrical shell with two side buttons on the left. The move signals Xiaomi’s push into competitive peripherals by leveraging a custom PixArt sensor to deliver high-performance tracking and calibration aimed at gamers and esports users. This matters for peripherals makers and competitive gaming hardware trends.
Xiaomi launched the Mijia Long-Handle Massage Gun 3, offering 12 kg peak thrust and 6 mm massage depth, with crowdfunding to start next Wednesday at an introductory price of ¥299. The device uses a brushless motor and integrated design, weighs about 680 g, and houses a 1900 mAh battery claimed to deliver up to 30 days of standby/runtime. It supports quick switching between long and short handle configurations (including a 7-shaped rebound long handle), offers fixed- and variable-frequency modes with intelligent gear memory, and ships with three interchangeable massage heads for flexible multi-site use. The model targets consumers seeking a versatile, ergonomic percussion massage tool in Xiaomi’s Mijia lineup.
Xiaomi has established a new Beijing-based company, Beijing Xiaomi Jingxu Technology Co., Ltd., whose business scope includes motor and battery manufacturing, generators, and auto parts. Corporate registry data shows the firm is indirectly wholly owned by Xiaomi Communications Technology Co., Ltd. The move signals Xiaomi expanding from consumer electronics into battery and electric motor production, which could strengthen its EV and power-supply ambitions, secure supply chains, and support future hardware or automotive initiatives. For the tech industry, onshore manufacturing of batteries and motors by a major smartphone and IoT player highlights vertical integration trends and increased competition in EV component supply.