Beirut
09-08-2005, 18:02
Just bought a Logitech MX518 gaming mouse. Expensive but very nice. Cost $70 Cdn. Traded some work for it so no cash hole in the pocket.
https://img.photobucket.com/albums/v298/horsesass/mouse.jpg
It's plug and play, though it does come with software if you want all the bells and whistles. The big kicker with this thing is it gives you on the fly, in-game options of 400, 800, or 1600dpi control with the touch of a button on the mouse (without installing the drivers). The 400 moves the pointer slowly and the 1600 moves it like lightning. 800 felt best.
The mouse itself is a bit on the big side but after a few minutes it fits the hand nicely. It has the standard left-right and wheel (silent!), and three small buttons on top for turning the dpi up or down or choosing a pre-set favorite (this requires the drivers). Two buttons on the left side are page back/forward as default.
In IL2-Sturmovik (that's a flight sim for you non-plane heads) it was smooth as glass. 800dpi was great for in-flight panning and 400 worked well in the mission builder for precise object placement when building custom scenery. 1600 was just too fast. A custom setting of about 1000 might be best for quick movement.
Tried it in the BF2 demo and it worked very nicely as well. 800 for running and gunning and 400 for sniper work - keeps the crosshairs steady.
For desktop work it's smooth and quick and hassle free. Mind you, it is just a mouse so it's not like it's going to crash through your roof and kill you if it isn't perfect. But it is a good mouse. PC Gamer gave it a 95%.
Lows = Very expensive, a bit big, and it requires the drivers for the fancy options. Drab colour.
Highs = Super smooth. Great control. Driverless in-game adjustable dpi control. Comfortable. Extra buttons.
As meese go, this one deserves the cheese. :mickey: "Squeak"
https://img.photobucket.com/albums/v298/horsesass/mouse.jpg
It's plug and play, though it does come with software if you want all the bells and whistles. The big kicker with this thing is it gives you on the fly, in-game options of 400, 800, or 1600dpi control with the touch of a button on the mouse (without installing the drivers). The 400 moves the pointer slowly and the 1600 moves it like lightning. 800 felt best.
The mouse itself is a bit on the big side but after a few minutes it fits the hand nicely. It has the standard left-right and wheel (silent!), and three small buttons on top for turning the dpi up or down or choosing a pre-set favorite (this requires the drivers). Two buttons on the left side are page back/forward as default.
In IL2-Sturmovik (that's a flight sim for you non-plane heads) it was smooth as glass. 800dpi was great for in-flight panning and 400 worked well in the mission builder for precise object placement when building custom scenery. 1600 was just too fast. A custom setting of about 1000 might be best for quick movement.
Tried it in the BF2 demo and it worked very nicely as well. 800 for running and gunning and 400 for sniper work - keeps the crosshairs steady.
For desktop work it's smooth and quick and hassle free. Mind you, it is just a mouse so it's not like it's going to crash through your roof and kill you if it isn't perfect. But it is a good mouse. PC Gamer gave it a 95%.
Lows = Very expensive, a bit big, and it requires the drivers for the fancy options. Drab colour.
Highs = Super smooth. Great control. Driverless in-game adjustable dpi control. Comfortable. Extra buttons.
As meese go, this one deserves the cheese. :mickey: "Squeak"