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.
IME the thing that tends to fail with mice/trackballs is the snap switches used to actuate the mouse buttons. They have a lifetime, and once they do they start to glitch.
But if you know how to solder sometimes you can replace them with better ones. I've been a heavy user of the Logitech M570 trackballs that are notorious for the poor switches they used that would fail after 2-3 years' of use. For the last batch I bought, I replaced all the switches with some high quality Cherry switches before putting them into use and had them last about 10 years before the electronics started to fail.
Once they died I replaced them with some cheapo Chinese wired trackballs since Logitech doesn't make wired ergonomic trackballs anymore: we'll see how they do and if/when they fail whether the switches can be easily replaced.
I do like my high DPI Logitech gaming mouse, though I don't like how hair-trigger the buttons on it are. I suspect the switches on that thing won't last very long, but I don't use it much since I tend to play games on Controller.
Technically they're still wired, if you don't mind the fact that it's not permanent.