

#Razer naga chroma full#
More like 6 hours from full charge to dead-in-the-water. The battery life on the mouse is nowhere near the 20 hours claimed in this review, either. Sometimes, too, the mouse fails to recognize ANY movement, and again needs to be reconnected to start working again. The mouse often decides that it no longer wants to recognize vertical movement, and the USB cable needs to be disconnected and reconnected to get it working again. This problem is minor, though, compared to the performance issues. I can turn them off, and on again, to get them back to the same color, but this only lasts an hour or so before they go out of sync again. After 45 days or so of use, the colors on the mouse wheel and side buttons will no longer stay synced. On the other hand, quality control at Razer is extremely lacking. Sure, the mouse is comfortable and I, unlike some others here, do not have any issue differentiating the side buttons in the heat of the moment. I own this mouse, and must protest the rating it is given. I prefer the Razer Naga Epic Chroma over the Logitech G600. In PVP using the G Shift feature of the Logitech mouse will be too slow in PVP to be accurate especially when it's more difficult to being sure which side button is being used. In addition the side buttons on the Razer have physical guides to allow you to know which button you have your finger on without stopping to glance at the mouse. However the side buttons are mechanical on the Razer so it's quicker to know when the button has been pressed.
#Razer naga chroma plus#
The third mouse button to the right of what by default is the right click on the Logitech is a big plus on the Logitech's side. In fact I like the fact that when the monitors are off I can have the mouse turn off it's LEDs. The Razer doesn't get all out of whack on the lock screen.
#Razer naga chroma windows#
However I have also found it to do things I don't like including pulsing color cycling when Windows is locked. The G600 is good and has more lighting options including a pulse. I have a Logitech G600 and a Razer Naga Epic Chroma. Whatever your preference the point I am making is that grid-based buttons in an MMO mouse is a horrible idea and reeks more of keyboard envy than good mouse design. That way I can trigger my main offensive and defensive skills with my two fastest fingers. Personally I love having a button between the right- and left-click buttons and the mouse wheel. The mind finds it easer to memorize -press little finger when dying- than -count in 3x2 when in trou - drat I am dead. I have tried other mice with the buttons clustered in different places and found them much easier to memorize. With my Naga I often found myself finding a reference point in grid and counting down to the button I needed. Furthermore it is quite easy to misclick in the heat of the battle due to the closeness of the buttons and the difficulty of remembering your position. Worse since it relies on your least dextrous finger (the thumb) its usually very hard to reach more than the central few buttons. A grid along the left is the hardest way to memorize a button layout. MMO gaming requires immediate access to many different functions. Whether that's a good thing or a bad thing will depend on your genre preferences. Like its predecessor, the Naga Epic Chroma is ideal for one genre and so-so for others, but Razer purposely designed the mouse this way. I'm not nearly a hardcore enough player to need more than 12 buttons at thumb point, but if you are, you can even shift between keymaps to give yourself access to more than 100 buttons with only a few clicks. When playing through The Old Republic (and World of Warcraft, for good measure), having my most frequently used skills at my fingertips was incredibly handy. The mouse’s unusual shape and preponderance of buttons mean that instead of keeping one or two vital skills close at hand, you’ll have to put up with a lot of unnecessary buttons or remap every skill in the game to your thumb.įor MMOs, however, the Naga Epic Chroma is about as good as mice get. The mouse was functional with all three titles (and some of the thumb buttons were useful for Heart of the Swarm when I created multiple subgroups within an army), but the Naga Epic Chroma is not the right tool for the job. I have nothing exciting to report about Titanfall, Heart of the Swarm or Assassin's Creed Unity. I tested the mouse with Titanfall, StarCraft II: Heart of the Swarm, Assassin's Creed Unity and Star Wars: The Old Republic. While it doesn't present any significant problems for other genres, if you plunk down $130 for this mouse, you'd better be prepared to spend most of your time with World of Warcraft or a similar title.


As the product's design suggests, the Naga Epic Chroma performs extremely well with MMOs.
