These can be changed via a DPI switch on the top of the mouse and can be programmed via a software application. Speaking of speed, the Zephyr PRO RGB has a DPI switch with options for five different speed intervals. Reaching speeds of up to 16,000 DPI with polling rates reaching 1000Hz and PTFE feet to reduce drag, the Zephyr is physically light with a responsive sensor to keep up with your speeds. The Razer Naga Trinity and Deathadder both utilize this sensor. This sensor, much like the OMRON switches, can be found in many high-caliber gaming mice on the market. Keeping with the comparison, the Zephyr PRO RGB utilizes a PixArt PMW3389 optical sensor. As an obsessive clicker, especially in ARPGs, I have yet to wear one down. These switches are fairly ubiquitous with gaming mice as they are rated for over 20 million clicks over their lifetime. Much like the original Zephyr, the Zephyr PRO RGB is equipped with OMRON switches. (More on the “mostly” side of that in a bit.) By reducing the noise and vibration of the original, adding software customization, and on-board memory to store your preferences, the Zephyr PRO RGB (mostly) fits its name. The Zephyr PRO RGB is no exception.īuilt on Marsback’s experience with the original Zephyr gaming mouse, the Zephyr PRO RGB picks up where it’s predecessor left off. This is a rather ambitious goal, for sure, but when you look at their early catalogue of products and their recent Kickstarter for their M1 mechanical keyboard, Marsback seems to have their eyes fixed on their goals. In case you aren’t familiar with the company, the Marsback story begins in 2018 with a group of millennials and a philosophy: to think and innovate with the consumer in mind, to build those “dream products,” and to dominate the future of the gaming space.
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