I have put a truly staggering number of hours into Elder Scrolls Online in the last few years. A couple of lockdowns certainly helped pump those numbers up, and the fact I’ve worked from home for over a decade, means I’m never far from being able to flip from work to play quicker than most gamers at the end of a hard day… or in the middle of a hard day too, if I wanted to. One thing I do more than most, however, is I wear out keyboards, mice and gaming chairs like nothing else. I don’t go to work and sit at one desk, then come home to sit at my own, I’m here for the long haul each day. I need a mouse that can do it all, fit my work schedule, but still deliver the high-end thrills I’ve got a taste for. It needs to deliver a next-level MMO gaming experience, so I can fire off chat commands, macros, emotes, add-ons and more without losing my pace in battle… or to just streamline my goofing around.
I’ve tinkered with so many mice in recent months, but when it comes to MMO gaming, I’ve managed to narrow it down to three truly special products. The SteelSeries AEROX 9 wireless, the Corsair Scimitar RGB Elite, and the ASUS ROG CHAKRAM CORE. They’re all flagship gaming mice from three of the biggest names in the business, and they all take a pretty unique approach and offer their own unique features too, but which one of them is right for you? Well, that’s what I hope to help you find out!
Also thank you to my friends at TecWare for providing a Phantom RGB Mechanical Keyboard, we’ll be diving into the best keyboards in an other feature, but hey, a good mouse test is a lot more fun with a good keyboard too!
Today, Nintendo has released some notable sales news for the last quarter, with multiple games…
This year, fans of Capcom franchises have been very happy, because during one of the…
Corsair has unveiled the MP700 ELITE series, their latest PCIe 5.0 SSDs, now available for…
The bad times that Intel is going through have given rise to news and information…
The arrival of the AMD Ryzen AI 300 processors, codenamed Strix Point, initially came with…
In the 90s, "Nintendo" became almost a universal term for any gaming console, much like…