Which cyborg rat should i get




















You get three palm rests: original, original plus grippy rubber, and elevated, which perches your palm a bit higher up. The palm rest also slides fore and aft, locking into one of several positions. This thing has got to weigh like a pound and a half. If you like heavy mice, look no further. All the metal in this thing makes it feel very substantial, and while the open architecture of it suggests fragility, it is in fact quite solid and well-built.

I had people over at my house after the bars closed, and one and all of them were baffled by how crazy this mouse looked. Some liked it, some hated it, none could effectively use it.

I had to concentrate in order not to hit the right click button while gripping the mouse hard enough to hold precision aim down. Even in an office full of seasoned tech journalists, the R.

It comes with a customizable 5,dots-per-inch laser sensor, a weight kit, a button dedicated to on-the-fly dpi adjustments, and a pair of thumb-side buttons to give you a few extra in-hand control options.

Mad Catz actually has a whole family of Cyborg R. The wireless R. The R. While some gamers, particularly competitive first-person-shooter players, have reservations about the response time of wireless mice, you can at least rule out the possibility that you'll miss out on a gaming session because of a low battery. Mad Catz includes two rechargeable battery packs with the R. The charging station comes with a convenient LED that changes from red to green when the battery is fully powered, and the lights on the mouse itself blink when the battery is running low.

The software also lets you establish profiles for the mouse so you can swap between control mappings and dpi levels as you change game modes or applications. Mad Catz also takes that convenience further by including a dedicated button on the mouse itself for swapping between three of those profiles. That's a feature we hadn't seen before, and we can easily imagine using it in a game with multiple play modes, for example Just Cause 2 or the upcoming Battlefield 3, in which your character can go from running around on foot to driving a vehicle.

Beyond the sensor settings and the software customization, Mad Catz has also given the R. It includes a weight kit, a relatively pedestrian feature in high-end gaming mice. And with the exception of the two primary mouse buttons, if there's a place on the R. A post running underneath the wrist rest holds up to seven round 6-gram weights.

To release the weights you unscrew a metal knob from the top of the post, but the knob itself is actually an Allen wrench that you use to make various adjustments to the mouse's grip.

There's no new innovation here; no plug and play mechanic, which both the wireless Mamba and Microsoft's Sidewinder X8 use to good effect. So you're stuck with a dual battery setup and having to switch batteries when power levels go south. North America. Home Reviews Pro. For As good as the R. Against Way too expensive No magnetic recharge cable.



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