This provides the mouse:
- 9 assignable mouse buttons (left and right mouse buttons, mouse wheel click button for the ring finger, 4 thumb buttons, DPI switch)
- Optical sensor with 4 dpi settings (400, 800, 1600, 3200 DPI)
- Weight Tuning 5x4g
- Yellow LED lights front, rear and the mouse wheel.
Scope of supply:
- Mouse with textilumanteltem cables (1,8m, yellow). Attached to it is a small velcro to avoid any cable clutter. (I personally find great) Gilded USB connector.
- Software CD, extra mouse skates, protective pouch, doorknobs trailers (Do not disturb, Gaming in Progress / Game over, Come in)
Processing:
The mouse itself is very stable. Nothing creaks or cracks. The left and right mouse buttons have higher Omron switches. Nevertheless, the other buttons do not work cheap. Can be found on the underside 2 large mouse skates glide great on my textile mousepad.
Ergonomics:
The mouse is designed for right-handers with (very) small hands. The top and the mouse wheel is rubberized and in my opinion a very good grip. The thumb side is slightly corrugated.
Both normal thumb buttons are easy to reach, the pressure point is quite firm. So is involuntary press very unlikely.
The two rear thumb buttons are too difficult to use for me in the game. To adjust the volume, for example, as I find them good It defaults.
The ring finger key fits surprisingly well. The finger is on pleasant and the pressure point is well chosen. (Here can be stored prima macros)
The DPI button is for me a bit inconvenient behind the wheel. But the tactile feedback is good.
Scrolling the mouse wheel is somewhat vague, even if it possible to detect single grid.
The weight tuning specialist is easily accessible and open with the simple push of a button. The up to 5 Rounds weights fit vertically in a space provided rubber lips.
Software:
The software can be divided into 5 sections just about everything set what is usage of concern for the games and other PC:
Shortcuts and DPI (x and y axis individually), sample rate (125, 500, 1000 Hz), pointer speed, mouse acceleration and speed, scroll and double-click speed. Of course, macros can be programmed.
The LED illumination can be switched on or off and can also pulsate (slow, medium, fast). However, the 4 stage DPI indicator is always on.
Conclusion:
Overall, one gets the Shark Zone M20 a really good gaming mouse for your money.
Very difficult it is for me, however, the transition from the Logitech G500. Even though I have fairly small hands (18.5 cm from the wrist to the tip of the middle finger) always rests at play and my wrist, the mouse is too small to me (106 x 74 x 39 mm). My hand gets tired quickly.
Why I give 4 stars?
The mouse is well made, the design well thought out and the ring finger key is very convenient.
The delivery I think compared to my last mice very extensive. In particular, the new mouse skates and small velcro on mouse cable can I find a prima bonus.
The pity is that the wheel is somewhat inaccurate and only forward and backward scrolling can. Right and Left, unfortunately not.
The mouse wheel "freely" provide for fast scrolling in the browser or a long document, unfortunately, does not go well.
Pent-up demand is still in the software: I can assign keys no profiles or programs.
DPI levels can be regulated only upward. So if I want to go back to 1600 DPI 800 DPI, I have to go the detour over the 3200 and 400 dpi.
But these are just little quirks which I can overlook.
Update 4/11/2014:
By now I've gotten used to the mouse and it no longer feels "strange" to. The hand fatigue is over it.
What bothers me a bit is the spongy wheel and so far have no Software Update.