Hands-on review: Gamesir Aimlabs G7 Pro 8K PC wireless esports controller
Gamesir and Aimlabs just got a deep-dive hands-on treatment for their new G7 Pro 8K PC wireless esports controller, and the early coverage has the aim-training crowd buzzing.

Why this collab makes sense
Aimlabs isn't some random name. It's already the default free aim trainer for a huge chunk of the FPS grind community, and the software side of the product has been feeding muscle-memory routines to players for a while now. GameSir hooking up with them for a dedicated wireless PC pad is a clear signal they're chasing the competitive grinder who actually cares about polling rates, stick tension, and trigger response — not the casual couch gamer.
The G7 Pro lands in a market that's already crowded with high-end pads from the usual suspects, so the differentiator here is supposed to be the Aimlabs integration baked into the product. Whether that ends up meaning built-in training scenarios, tweaked default deadzones, or just a fancy sticker on the box is exactly the kind of thing a hands-on review is meant to settle.
Why mobile esports grinders should care
Hear me out — I know most of you are on touch, and the G7 Pro isn't going into your BGMI or PUBG Mobile ranked lobby. But cross-training is real, and a bunch of the top Indian mobile FPS pros use PC shooters as part of their daily warmup routine. Flick speed, tracking, target acquisition — these transfer more than people think, and aim trainers like Aimlabs are literally built around isolating those mechanics in clean drills.
There's also the PC esports angle that's quietly having a moment in the country. Valorant and CS2 cafe scenes in Hyderabad, Mumbai, Bangalore, and even tier-2 cities are running packed, and grassroots orgs are starting to field actual rosters. If you're moving from mobile to PC, or running both ecosystems, a controller that bakes in aim-training context is a clean fit for a practice block.
What to watch next
Three things. India pricing and availability — GameSir has shipped to local retail before, so there's a decent path here, but import markups through third-party sellers can be brutal, and you'll want to know the landed cost before committing. Independent benchmarks on that 8K polling claim, because marketing numbers and real-world feel are two different things, and the full review cycle will tell us which one this lands on. And any word on whether Aimlabs pushes controller-specific training scenarios for the G7 Pro — that's the part that could elevate this past just another wireless pad with a big number on the box.