Logitech MX Creative Console, 9 Customizable LCD Keys, Stream Deck Accessories,Connectivity Technology USB-C, Control Dial for Graphic Design, Zoom, Spotify - Graphite, 3-Month Adobe Cloud Membership

Logitech MX Creative Console, 9 Customizable LCD Keys,...

ASIN: B0D5FRQXWZCOMFeb 27, 2026
62
Trust Score
Caution
CAUTION

Good for: Buyers willing to read the details before deciding

Watch out for: suspicious-timing

Last analyzed: February 2026

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Total Reviews

380

On Amazon

Verified

100%

Good

a

Amazon Rating

4.0

Original rating

S

Savinoo Rating

3.0

Adjusted rating

Our Recommendation

CAUTION

BE CAUTIOUS - Read individual reviews carefully, especially 1-star and 3-star reviews, before purchasing.

Analysis Summary

  • MEDIUM RISK (Score: 62/100) Logitech MX Creative Console, 9 Customizable LCD Keys,... has some concerning review patterns. Major Issues Found: Logitech MX Creative Console, 9 Customizable LCD Keys,... has an unusual pattern: many 5-star reviews but also many low ratings (1-3 stars).
  • This could indicate fake reviews or serious quality problems. Additional Concerns: Review dates show suspicious clustering patterns, which may indicate coordinated fake reviews. Low author diversity detected - some reviewers may have written multiple reviews. Positive Indicators: 100% of reviews are from verified purchases, which is good. 88% of reviews are detailed (over 100 words), which suggests genuine feedback..

Customer Reviews from Amazon

Most Helpful Review

Verified

"I recently got the Logitech MX Creative Console, and it’s been a game-changer for my editing workflow. This two-piece console features a customizable keypad and a dialpad, both easy to set up with the Logi Options+ app. It’s especially useful for Adobe Creative Cloud users, with dedicated integrations for Premiere Pro, Photoshop, and others, plus additional apps coming soon.I am personally not a creative cloud user and still find it very useful. I have created my own profiles for Capcut, Davinci Resolve, Krita, and, for the fun of it, even an old Quake 1 map editor. I fully expect to add more profiles for random and obscure apps in the future.The hardware is sturdy, with an aluminum dial and customizable LCD buttons on the keypad. You can create your own graphics to fully customize all the buttons. My only gripe is the current limited selection of third-party apps in the Options+ marketplace, but I’m optimistic this will grow over time as users and developers contribute. A little surprised Blender wasn't on the list at release. I fully expect that and various cad software support soon.Overall, it’s a fantastic addition to any creative setup. But could see the usefulness in Excel, PowerPoint, and other such productivity applications as well.Color matches with my actual computer, bluetooth connectivity is great. Definitely worth its price, highly recommend!"

livingcrazy4u
15 found helpful
Verified

livingcrazy4u

I recently got the Logitech MX Creative Console, and it’s been a game-changer for my…

I recently got the Logitech MX Creative Console, and it’s been a game-changer for my editing workflow. This two-piece console features a customizable keypad and a dialpad, both easy to set up with the Logi Options+ app. It’s especially useful for Adobe Creative Cloud users, with dedicated integrations for Premiere Pro, Photoshop, and others, plus additional apps coming soon.I am personally not a creative cloud user and still find it very useful. I have created my own profiles for Capcut, Davinci Resolve, Krita, and, for the fun of it, even an old Quake 1 map editor. I fully expect to add more profiles for random and obscure apps in the future.The hardware is sturdy, with an aluminum dial and customizable LCD buttons on the keypad. You can create your own graphics to fully customize all the buttons. My only gripe is the current limited selection of third-party apps in the Options+ marketplace, but I’m optimistic this will grow over time as users and developers contribute. A little surprised Blender wasn't on the list at release. I fully expect that and various cad software support soon.Overall, it’s a fantastic addition to any creative setup. But could see the usefulness in Excel, PowerPoint, and other such productivity applications as well.Color matches with my actual computer, bluetooth connectivity is great. Definitely worth its price, highly recommend!
15 people found this helpful
Verified

Anonymous

It works great, a little time consuming at first to configurate but once configured it's…

It works great, a little time consuming at first to configurate but once configured it's a great tool. I use it in Photoshop but they still have no Bridge or Adobe Camera Raw support, that means that you'll have to create your own personal profiles. The setup software works really well and it's very intuitive, so the learning curve is not steep and wont require much time to learn how to configure. The bluetooth connection also works really well. Logitech is constantly updating the controller, so I expect it to work even better and have more usability in the future
Verified

cd

For the nonce, I am giving this 4 stars. For the last month, I have…

For the nonce, I am giving this 4 stars. For the last month, I have been using it for mostly Lightroom Classic editing. I do quite a bit of PS work too but I wanted to focus on one thing. Therefore, the rating may change. First things first... about the device. Being a mechanical keyboard user including task pads, this feels super cheap. YMMV. The buttons on the pad are super squishy with little to no tactile response. The wheels and buttons on the dialpad are good however I find that piece mostly useless. The most irritating thing is that the device loses what app it's in even though I haven't changed apps nor have windows popped up. ALT + Tab is your friend to get things back. Note that all LR features are not available in every or all layouts. This is super annoying. The features that aren't available, you have to create custom actions which are not well documented and clunky to create. Also, common actions sometimes don't work or they do the wrong thing. I do quite a bit of batch processing and that is very limited. The sync feature has no UI by default which is dumb since you may not want all attributes synchronized. You have to create your own action for that. The crop overlay is terrible and the dialpad, for me, is worse than a mouse.It does, once you setup the button flow, increase the speed of edits. The self labeling buttons is awesome. This beats out nearly every custom pad.I plan on putting my PS workflow to the test with this and perhaps I will update the review.The implementation is via Adobe's API. In theory, if you are a dev, you can get an API key and make your own button pad the way you want. I may do that if and when I feel plucky enough. I agree that this could be implemented better and perhaps it will mature. I hope that other apps will create profiles but since I use LR/PS a significant amount of time, this is worth keeping though it's not the greatest. I wish this was, overall, just better... YMMV
Verified

adam s

In theory, this device is great. I came from using a Tourbox, which is no…

In theory, this device is great. I came from using a Tourbox, which is no longer supported by the company. I thought this would be a more modern replacement but unfortunately, it is not The keypad connects to their software and works just fine to program different functions. The problem is the bluetooth shuttle, which has to connect to your computer rather than to the other half of the logitech device. This is such a horrible design concept! On the rare occasion that it can stay connected for longer than 10 minutes, the device is slow, clunky, and very unresponsive. I tried using it with Premiere Pro and the jog wheel is jerky and has about a 1 second lag. It's completely worthless because of this and I'm sending it back for a refund. I called "customer service" and they were of absolutely zero help. I had high hopes for this device, but alas, it's another tech product that sounds great on paper but is terrible in application.
6 people found this helpful
Verified

swim karsplashian

I do a great deal of creative editing in several applications and this will be…

I do a great deal of creative editing in several applications and this will be my third device in an attempt to streamline / speed up workflow and I finally got it right.I had a Loupedeck (cheap and finicky) and a Tourbox (by the time I really got it flowing, it broke) and really needed something simple and customizable.Grabbed one of these, game changer. Keypad is backlit, every button is fully customizable by color / label / function and you can have multiple pages.The scroll wheel is heavy and has good tactile feel, and the buttons on the wheel are also assignable.The only 2 drawbacks I’ve found are as follows: The Logi app is easy to navigate and fun to use, but unlike some of the competition, not EVERY function in a given app is available and assignable. Granted, it covers 95 percent of what you’d need, but as a power user I sadly ran into 3-4 things that weren’t options in the assignable function list. Usually creating automations / presets and then assigning them to a button dodged most issues (which is incredible by the way. Having labeled presets and actions as physical glowing buttons).Other drawback is the app updates. Every week or two I plug in my MX and start working and it doesn’t function. Turns out my creative software updated automatically at some point and it rendered the Logi useless until I update it as well. I fear the day Logi stops updating, as this thing is heavily dependent on its software.Overall it rules, costs less than other tools like it, and I highly recommend it. You also get to look like some kind of missile commander once you get good at it, if you’re using it in public.
12 people found this helpful
Verified

j brown

The MX Creative Console is really two gadgets in one box. One is a bright…

The MX Creative Console is really two gadgets in one box. One is a bright keypad with nine little LCD faces. The other is a dialpad that looks like it rolled straight off a sci-fi sound board. That split personality makes a single rating tricky, so I will break it apart.Dialpad X2, take a bowThe dialpad is wireless, rock solid on the desk, and wakes up the instant the creative juice starts flowing. I park it under my left palm, mouse in my right, and the two behave like they have been partners for years. The dual rotary controls plus the four buttons nail every Figma nudge, zoom, and scrub I throw at them. Options+ lets me carve per-app profiles. If Logitech sold this part on its own I would hand it five stars and probably buy a second one for the snack drawer.Keypad, please see me after classNow the keypad. The screens are crisp even at 20% brightness in a sun-blasted office. Loads of plugins, loads of built-ins, but the clever ideas stop halfway. I can show a clock or a date but not both on the same key. Tap the date and nothing happens. Seconds tick and the digits jump position like jittery popcorn which is oddly distracting during focus time. Figma refuses to auto switch profiles on Windows so I have to babysit it. Worst part is the hardware. A stiff USB-C cable exits straight out the top then drags the thing across the desk every time I poke a key. The plastic pedestal tries to tame the cable but looks like an unrelated accessory I found in a bargain bin with a chonky lip of mismatch plastic and color to hold it in place. Flat on the desk the viewing angle is lousy unless I block prime keyboard real estate, already claimed by the dialpad. Wireless data with a thin, super flexible, clear power cord would have done wonders here with more weight and better feet.Software and integrationsLogi Options+ scores better than average. There are canned profiles for Photoshop, Premiere, Lightroom, After Effects, Final Cut, Resolve, Figma, Teams, Zoom, and Spotify. Swapping functions is point and click. Still no scripting layer for real power users. I keep hoping for a simple Lua box or at least a macro recorder.Wish list for version two1. Sell the dialpad alone. Trust me, people will line up.2. Give the keypad a braided side-exit cable or, even better, batteries and low-power wireless.3. Let keys combine data, and pages that stay pinned across profiles.4. Expose a scripting API so nerds like me can automate wild stuff.Bottom lineAt roughly two hundred bucks the bundle lands well under Stream Deck plus a Loupedeck knob set. For visual pros deep in Adobe land the keypad may earn its keep, but for code-first makers the dialpad is the real prize. If Logitech splits the pair I'd be first in line. But the Dialpad has a LONG way to go and it's not all fixable in software.
4 people found this helpful

What Customers Talk About

Commonly Praised

creativebuttonsyourconsolelogicreatecreative consolebutton

Commonly Complained

devicelongertheory devicedevice tourboxtourbox longerlonger supportedsupported companycompany modern

Review Quality Analysis

Review quality helps identify authentic customer feedback. Longer, detailed reviews (50+ words) typically indicate genuine experiences, while high percentages of short reviews (under 20 words) may suggest incentivized or fake feedback.

Average Words

252

✓ Detailed reviews

Long Reviews

88%

✓ Good engagement

Short Reviews

0%

✓ Low brief reviews

Review Length Distribution

Authentic vs Brief Reviews

Average Word Count Gauge

Benchmark: 30 words = moderate, 50+ words = detailed & authentic

252

avg. words per review

Detailed (50+)
Moderate (30–49)
Brief (<30) — Suspicious

Interpretation: Strong indicators of authentic, detailed customer feedback.

Review Velocity

Review velocity tracks how quickly reviews are posted. Steady, gradual accumulation is natural, while sudden spikes or bursts (20+ reviews in a single day) may indicate incentivized campaigns or coordinated activity.

Average Per Day

0.10

Natural pace

Max in One Day

5

Normal range

Steady Velocity Detected

Reviews posted at a consistent, natural pace over time — typical of organic customer feedback.

Rating Breakdown

This chart shows how customers rated Logitech MX Creative Console, 9 Customizable LCD Keys,.... Products with authentic reviews typically show a bell curve with most ratings in the 3–4 star range. A heavily polarized distribution — many 5★ and 1★ with few middle ratings — can be worth investigating further.

5
60%
228
4
12%
46
3
11%
42
2
19
1
12%
46

Key Findings

This product has an unusual pattern: many 5-star reviews but also many low ratings (1-3 stars). This could indicate fake reviews or serious quality problems.

Review dates show suspicious clustering patterns, which may indicate coordinated fake reviews.

Low author diversity detected - some reviewers may have written multiple reviews.

Warning Flags

2 flags

suspicious-timing

low-author-diversity

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