![]() (You can read more about the double-click failure below.) Razer has redesigned most of its gaming mice to use optical switches rather than mechanical ones, and several other manufacturers have followed suit-so far, these designs don’t seem to develop the same switch failure, but they can be more expensive and are harder on battery life in wireless models. Switches: Many gaming mice use mechanical switches, which can fail sooner than expected on a small percentage of gaming mice.Manufacturers like to brag about high-DPI sensors, but many people rarely use settings higher than 3,000, and most Overwatch League players keep it between 800 and 1,600. Sensor: All modern gaming mice-even the budget models-have good sensors, so this isn’t a differentiating factor in our evaluation.Build quality: A good gaming mouse shouldn’t feel hollow and cheap or flex under pressure.It should also provide a crisp, satisfying click, and it shouldn’t feel mushy or too difficult to press. Scroll wheel: The scroll wheel should be sturdy and easy to grip, with distinctive ratchets that make it clear when you’ve swapped weapons, for example.We eliminate mice with buttons that are too easy to click by mistake or too difficult to reach on purpose. All these buttons should be easy to reach for average-size hands. Buttons: In addition to left- and right-click buttons, a mouse should have at least two extra buttons near the thumb, and maybe one or two on top (including the clickable scroll wheel).We aim to find mice that feel comfortable for the widest range of hand sizes and the most popular grips (fingertip and palm, followed by claw), but no mouse is universally comfortable. Comfort is reliant on your hand size and grip style, so what works for one person doesn’t always work for another. Comfort: The most important feature of any mouse is whether it feels comfortable in your hand. ![]() This meant I could swap between them in the loading screen if I wanted different profiles for different characters. The GHUB software was easy to use and allowed me to assign one of the buttons on the mouse to cycle profiles super quickly. ![]() After changing my mouse pad and testing them again, they slid across my desk perfectly. I only very recently upgraded my mouse mat, so when testing these mice I actually had a relatively bad one and I found that I was still getting next to no drag at all. I found myself not really using the sniper button so I switched it over to a normal cap and it became my ping button. I typically play both shooters and MOBAs, and found that the number of buttons suited me perfectly for both genres. Meanwhile, I found myself changing between the scroll wheel options quite often so I could navigate long webpages for work but still have a normal scroll wheel for when I want to switch between weapons without infinite scrolling between them. I much more preferred the wired edition but that's just because I prefer plug and play since my memory is too bad to remember to charge my mouse when it's got a low battery. I tested both the wired and wireless units and found that both of them worked amazingly. ![]() The wired edition is obviously plug-and-play so you don't have to worry about battery life or input lag. The mouse boasts a 120-hour battery life without the RGB on or 37 hours with the RGB constantly on. This is also the cable that charges it, meaning you can charge and play at the same time if you run out of power mid-game. However, you can also use it with a wired connection via a USB to USB-C cable. The wireless edition connects with a Lightspeed 2.4ghz USB connector. This is great for those who may need to bunny hop but still want the option to switch back and forth between scrolling styles. You also get the choice between standard scrolling or ultrafast scrolling with this mouse, which you can change with just the press of a button. You can also store up to five on-board memory profiles if you use Logitech GHUB (or two without it). No matter what games you play or if you play a wide range of them, this mouse will work for you. The DPI on these pointers go from 100 all the way up to 25,000. There is a dedicated sniper button on the side of the mouse, but the cap on this can be swapped over to a standard one included in the box so it can be a normal button too. The location of the buttons are easy access and I found them much more satisfying when compared to other models that just pile buttons on top of one another as you don't have to worry about fat-fingering them. To begin with, you get 13 programmable buttons. Aside from the fact that one is wired and one is wireless, the functional features offered by the two mice are practically identical.
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