What it is
The MOZA CS Pro is a 325mm GT wheel at $329 with a 2.99-inch display (780x248 pixels), 8 backlit buttons, 4 rotary encoders, 2 thumb encoders, 2 funky switches, and forged carbon magnetic paddle shifters with Hall sensors. It effectively replaced the more expensive RS V2, offering a screen and better paddles for less money.
The spec sheet at this price is difficult to beat. Forged carbon paddle shifters, Hall sensor technology throughout, backlit encoders, a functional screen, and dual-clutch paddles. The CS Pro works natively with all MOZA bases, and also supports Simucube, Simagic, and Fanatec wheelbases via MOZA’s $49 Universal Hub Kit.
Who it’s for
Anyone in the MOZA ecosystem who wants on-wheel telemetry without paying Vision GS money. If you have an R5, R9, R12, or R16 and want tyre temps, fuel load, and lap delta visible without glancing at a secondary monitor, the CS Pro delivers that for $329. It also suits cross-platform users who might move between ecosystems, since the Universal Hub Kit extends compatibility beyond MOZA.
In use
The 2.99-inch screen sounds small. In practice, 780x248 pixels is sharp enough to read tyre temperatures mid-corner. The display runs through Pit House (MOZA’s software), not SimHub, which limits customisation options but works reliably out of the box. Having data on the wheel genuinely changes the driving experience. You stop looking away from the track.
The forged carbon paddle shifters are the other standout. They have a clean, consistent throw with Hall sensor precision throughout. Dual-clutch paddles work well for rolling starts. The overall feel on-track is transparent. On a MOZA R12, the CS Pro disappears from your awareness and you just drive, which is the highest compliment for any steering wheel.
At roughly 2,150g with all paddles attached (780g for the rim alone), weight is moderate. On lighter bases like the R5, you will notice the inertia, but it is not problematic. The 325mm diameter sits in the sweet spot for GT work.
What to watch out for
The screen only works through Pit House. No SimHub dashboard support. If you have a custom SimHub layout you rely on, the CS Pro will not display it. This is the single biggest limitation.
The upshift paddle occasionally missed soft presses in testing, roughly 1 in 20. Firmer input resolves it, but it is worth noting if you have a light touch.
MOZA ecosystem lock-in applies unless you buy the $49 Universal Hub Kit. Factor that into the total cost if you are on Simucube or Simagic.
PC only. No PlayStation, no Xbox. MOZA does not do consoles.
Verdict
The CS Pro is the best value screen wheel in the catalogue. $329 gets you a display, forged carbon paddles, Hall sensors, and a spec list that nothing else at this price can match. The Pit House-only screen limitation is real, and SimHub users will feel it. But for the majority of racers who just want data on the wheel, this delivers.