Logitech expands MX Creative Console with Office Plugins
By Riley Hart

Image / theverge.com
Office shortcuts just got a desk-side upgrade.
Logitech is widening the reach of its MX Creative Console by adding Productivity Plugins for Microsoft Office apps, namely Word, Excel, and PowerPoint, as well as Slack and Notion. The move follows a September 2024 debut for the console, which Logitech positioned as a Stream Deck alternative built to complement its MX ecosystem. In hands-on coverage, The Verge notes that shortcuts, actions, and app tools can be invoked through the device's Actions Ring menus, extending the console beyond its original focus on creativity apps like Final Cut Pro, Adobe Lightroom, and Figma.
This expansion matters for people who juggle multiple software in a single sitting. The MX Creative Console is designed to streamline workflows by letting users trigger commonly used commands with a tap rather than digging through menus or hunting for keyboard shortcuts. The new Office plugins mean frequent Excel users could launch data analysis templates, PowerPoint designers could pull in slides or formatting tools, and Word users could insert templates or formatting presets with fewer clicks. Slack and Notion integrations point to a broader aim: make the MX line a centralized control surface for a hybrid, multi-app workspace rather than a single-task gadget.
From a consumer perspective, the development underscores Logitech's strategy to turn physical hardware into a universal control plane for modern workflows. The MX ecosystem already targets power users who want tactile, programmable access to apps and systems; adding productivity plugins broadens that appeal to white-collar and remote teams who live in documents and collaboration tools as much as in creative software. The keyboard and mouse are no longer the only bottlenecks; now the physical console can guide a person through a task sequence with a few deliberate taps.
There are, of course, caveats. The biggest unknown in the current rollout is price. The Verge's report does not disclose how much the Productivity Plugins cost or whether they require a subscription beyond whatever is bundled with the MX Creative Console. For buyers, pricing clarity matters: a few plugins included for free versus a recurring fee can dramatically shift the value proposition for mixed-use buyers who may already own multiple Logitech devices. Setup time is another question mark. While the console promises plug-and-play access to these apps, real-world use depends on how thoroughly each plugin maps to app features and how reliably the Actions Ring can trigger the desired commands in fast-paced work sessions.
Two to four practitioner insights that matter now:
Should you buy, wait, or skip? If you already own an MX Creative Console and frequently toggle between Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Slack, and Notion, this expansion is worth investigating. If you’re not tied to Logitech hardware or you mostly use non-supported apps, you might skip or hold off until pricing and user experiences with the new plugins are clearer.
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