Picture the scene: I’m trundling along in War Thunder in my Panzer 4 and suddenly I spot the dreaded impenetrable KV1 out the corner of my eye. I must say the wildcard here is definitely the sound feedback tab, I only glanced at the software when I set the mouse up at first so I assumed the sound would be a beep of some kind. My favourite option by far is the fact that the options for lift off distance include ‘Low’ and ‘Extra Low’ if you have read my other mouse reviews you will know I like to moan about high lift off distances so I have to give special praise when this is actively remedied! The next tab is the Advanced Control area which gives us control over polling rate, lift off distance amongst others including the rather nice sensor alignment option which lets you adjust the angle the sensor registers zero rotation at, which is good if you don’t like resting your wrist dead straight. This is a cool feature for people who need more functionality in their mouse but don’t like the look of a mouse plastered with buttons. The right hand side of this screen features the Easy Shift button assignments which lets you program extra functions to your mouse to be used in conjunction with the Easy shift button which you can bind to either M4 or M5. Speaking of reprogramming buttons we have here the button assignment tab, as you can see we have control over all of the buttons and there are a good amount of functions that you can bind. One thing I did like was the WP button which means that profile is the default Windows profile that the software will switch to when you aren’t in a game, which is great if you want to re program all the buttons for office shortcuts in normal use. At the bottom we also have a profile manager with five slots which is a good amount for most people to be able to have one for each of the games they play the most. We have control over things like DPI, scroll speed and double click speed all the basics. Here we have the first tab of the software, ‘Main Control’.
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