I bought a Asus TUF mouse awhile ago specifically because I wanted a mouse that would last, it lasted a year which is a fair amount of time but for the money I was expecting a bit more life. It seems I'm so clicky and touch type that much I rip through peripherals like it's nothing. A fair warning though if you're thinking of investing in a peripheral, the brands that brag about build quality mean nothing if the mechanism that actually does the actions is held together by some flimsy piece of plastic. It seems a lot of the brands all do this which is why sometimes the mechanism will just break and you'll have a barely functional mouse.
I just thought I'd spare people the money potentially. If you're a heavy user it seems that buying peripherals in bulk is probably the better option. In case people are wondering how I did it, no I don't treat my peripherals like shit, if I'm not in a game engine constantly clicking and placing stuff I'm in Blender doing tons of clicks and that's on top of the gaming I like to do as a break as well as general browsing and computer usage.
It's very nice to know it's not just me that experiences this, even the ones that claim to don't actually test these peripherals with heavy users. It is also making realise just how much I click with the mouse these days lol. I'm probably better off just bulk buying 6 mice or something on a clearance sale, definitely not going to bother with anything from the local shops either, they're just annoying and not very good at all for the price they are.
With wireless you have the added problem of them being extremely pricey and the batteries, I used to quite like wireless stuff but these days I'm being more won over by extension cables to give that necessary range. Also hated having the wireless headphones cut out on me randomly due to the poor connection despite being the same room and charging up constantly is annoying.
I hate wires, so there's that bit. My gaming PC is HTPC form factor on a big TV and if I strung wires across the floor they'd just get tripped over. I do generally hate my wireless headset though (Logitech, idk we will call it POS edition wireless headset). It was cheap, so well I got what I paid for. I don't use it that much. If I ever do care, I may try a Bluetooth setup with some nice headphones. Any of that whole needing a fancy headset so my friends wear hear important callouts in a competitive game is far, far in my past, so I don't really need a gaming headset.
But yeah, those Razer peripherals were a serious splurge for me trying to fix up my desk. They were not inexpensive. Yet both of them were relegated to backup use in a little over a year.