Operation and ergonomics
So now let’s get to the most important part of the test. Designed for right-handed users, the SABER RGB PRO Wireless has a classic shape.
The matte, slightly rough surface offers a very good grip and the various indentations make the mouse comfortable to hold. While I had studied and tested the different postures especially for the review, I kept falling back into the posture I had been using for decades, the “Palm Grip”. In the following therefore still a few pictures with different grasp attitudes:
The keys are all easy to reach and offer a flawless pressure point. There is no separate “sniper button”, but since all buttons are freely programmable, one of the two shoulder buttons could be reconfigured for it, depending on the game. For the non-shooter gamers, a sniper button is a button that sets the DPI to a different value for the period of time it is pressed to adjust the sensitivity to personal preference while viewing “in the crosshairs”.
In the following my personal experiences, which I have collected with the mouse, because in my opinion they would be too extensive for the concluding conclusion.
First of all, I was surprised at how well I did with the light weight of the mouse. I guess I’m still old school in that regard and had always put the heaviest weights in since the advent of weight adjustable mice. With my last mouse I had already noticed that this is not the right way at all, because you quickly destroy the balance of the mouse. Bump your mouse from the side and observe if the front or the rear moves faster and the body does not move smoothly as a result. The Sabre seems to be perfectly balanced in this respect and moves absolutely smoothly back and forth.
Due to the classic shape of the mouse, the generous PTFE feet are attached to each corner, providing a flat surface to rest on. The glide on my cloth mouse pad is absolutely fantastic due to the good glide of the feet and the light weight, I would have had the mouse back in the Counter-Strike 1.5 days!
Very clever: the five DPI gradations, which you can switch through via the mouse’s DPI button, can also be adjusted without iCUE software. The following gradations are stored as standard:
Via the DPI button, the gradations can be individually adjusted in steps of 50:
In the iCUE software (next section), you can even customize the indicator colors for each gradation and change the DPI count in increments of 1.
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