Nice gaming mouse. Engine 3 app makes it very customisable and fine tune to your personal prefences. Also added presets from other pro gamers to play with. Happy with this overall.
Manufacturer: SteelSeries
Nice gaming mouse. Engine 3 app makes it very customisable and fine tune to your personal prefences. Also added presets from other pro gamers to play with. Happy with this overall.
S teelser ies have recently updated two of their popular gaming mice, the Sensei and the Rival. Both feature the new Steelseries Truemove3 optical sensor designed specifically with esports in mind. What separates these two mice and are they worth the £59.99 price tag
The Sensei 310 is the newest iteration of the legendary Sensei. SteelSeries upgraded the product with a new sensor they call "TrueMove3", and a new design where the main buttons aren't part of the main shell.
SteelSeries has provided us with the SteelSeries Sensei 310 and the Rival 310, both of which share the same engine and sensor, housed in separate chassis designs. We kick off this two-parter with the ambidextrous Sensei 310.
+ TrueMove3 sensor is epic; + Excellent shape; + Lightweight; balanced design; + Suitable for eSports; + Also available in a right-handed chassis; + Solid build quality (What do you expect from SteelSeries?
SteelSeries has released a new version of its Rival gaming mouse series, the Rival 310, at a more budget-minded $59.99 price point. Does this latest version of the Rival hold up to its predecessors and give gamers a good value for their dollar Read on to find out!
We just posted our review of the SteelSeries Rival 310 , the first of a new pair of mice aimed at the eSports crowd with a new SteelSeries TrueMove3 optical sensor . The TrueMove3 optical sensor in these mice boasts a 12,000 CPI, 350 IPS sensor that is ultra-low-latency to deliver "the most natural...
If you're a right handed gamer, look no further. This is the best mouse on the market right now, 10/10
We like the guts and the ambidextrous design of the Sensei 310, but a few advances in the configuration software would make this mouse something really special.
Shaped for lefties and righties alike; Attractive; solid design; yet light; Hair-trigger Omron switches and good optical sensor; Support for acceleration; deceleration; angle snapping
Only two DPI settings; No lift-distance control; Best for big hands; Non-braided cord; Ho-hum macro editor; Can't sync lighting for both light zones easily
With these caveats noted, the Sensei 310 is a strong entry in the market for high-end optical gaming mice. It's an ambidextrous one, and thus not optimized for ergonomics with a horizontal arch, and the scroll wheel is too far forward for your typical hand-unless you prefer a claw grip.
Shaped for lefties and righties alike; Attractive, solid design, yet light; Hair-trigger Omron switches and good optical sensor; Support for acceleration, deceleration, angle snapping
Only two DPI settings; No lift-distance control; Best for big hands; Non-braided cord; Ho-hum macro editor; Can't sync lighting for both light zones easily
Some manufacturers work the concept of branding very carefully, with every product they release in a family maintaining evidence of physical continuity with its ancestors. Nearly all of the late Mad Catz's mice, for example, looked like mechas designed by Japanese animators. All of Samsung's Xpress consumer printers, like portable toasters that have evolved feet over time to chase smaller mammalian prey. If you liked the style of one Mad Catz RAT or Xpress printer you'd previously owned, chances are you'd feel reassured looking at others in the same lineage for potential purchases in the future. It felt like coming home. That's what branding is all about. Some companies, however, forego branding altogether—and yet a third group uses it as a catch-all. SteelSeries' Sensei mice would appear to fall into this last category. Among them are the Sensei 310 ($59.99) A glance at several products in the Sensei line—the original Sensei of 2011, the Sensei [RAW] of 2013, and the Sensei Wire...
We like the guts and the ambidextrous design of the Sensei 310, but a few advances in the configuration software would make this mouse something really special.
Shaped for lefties and righties alike; Attractive, solid design, yet light; Hair-trigger Omron switches and good optical sensor; Support for acceleration, deceleration, angle snapping
Only two DPI settings; No lift-distance control; Best for big hands; Non-braided cord; Ho-hum macro editor; Can't sync lighting for both light zones easily
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