The mouse is lightweight with a cheap plasticy feel and the sort of poor tolerances, with wide seams and gaps. The skimpy multi-language instructions sheet is full of tortured English gibberish like, “LED switch button is on bottom of mouse, there are three option ON, OFF,ON/light ,put it at ON/light, the LED with be lighting up.” That is a verbatim transcription of how the text appears, misplaced commas and all. It appears to be made by “Easterntimes Tech” in China and then resold by other brands, without modification. Title=More%20Expert%20Tech%20Roundups&type=articles%2Cvideos&tags=tech-roundup&count=6&columnCount=6&theme=article None of these brands exist on the box or the product itself. There’s a version with blue lights sold under the Habor brand. It is also sold for a couple bucks less under the Pictek brand. The actual branding on this mouse can be a little confusing. Plenty of places evaluate the latest and hottest from Corsair, Razer, and Logitech - but what happens when you put a cheap, no-name piece of hardware through the same battery of tests? We decided to find out. How can this be? Can a wireless gaming mouse that costs as little as a cheap, wired, non-gaming mouse actually be this good? Can you really buy a decent wireless gaming mouse for less than $20? It’s all of $14 and has a four-star average on Amazon from about 900 ratings. Then we discovered this wireless mouse from "Easterntimes Tech." (See it on Amazon) / (See it on Amazon UK). You can often pay $50 more for a wireless gaming mouse than for the equivalent wired model-and those usually aren’t cheap either.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |