Razer adds a dozen keys to Naga MMO mouse, intros rollable gaming surface

Who says MMO gamers are alienated by everyone accessory makers? Across the pond in Germany, Razer has stepped up to serve the needs of basement-dwelling World of Warcraft players with its first dedicated MMO mouse. The Naga, as it’s so beautifully called, gives users a dozen customizable buttons on the side in order to take some of those keyboard macros (or just the 1 – 12 number keys) and put them within thumb’s reach. The mouse (shown in video after the break) also ships with a robust software suite that can save unlimited profiles and program “thousands of different in-game commands for each character you choose to play.” In case that’s not enough to get your juices flowing, the company also outed an all new gaming surface (the Megasoma) that can be rolled up and tucked away for easy transport between LAN parties. Check the read link for all the nitty-gritty details, and get ready to hand over $79.99 for the critter and $49.99 for the mouse when they ship worldwide later this year.

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Razer adds a dozen keys to Naga MMO mouse, intros rollable gaming surface originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 19 Aug 2009 16:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Razer Offers Massive Buttons for MMO Players

RazerNaga.jpg

MMO fans, casting spells just got a little easier. Razer, the premier gaming peripherals company, just unleashed the Razer Naga, a mouse created just for you. This right-handed mouse offers a 12-button grid where your thumb sits giving you an alternate way of calling up your keyboard’s spell keys. That leaves your left hand free to work other keyboard controls.

The Naga comes with customization software that lets you create unlimited profiles for supported titles, and also program different in-game commands for each of your characters. For more, check out this YouTube video.

Razer also just introduced the Megasoma, a mousing surface that’s designed to combine the best features of hard and soft mats. Razer says it offers the superior tracking and durability of a hard mat, as well as the smooth glide of a soft mat.

Both products were announced today at Gamescom 2009 in Cologne, Germany. The Naga sells for $79.99 and the Megasoma for $49.99.

Razer preys on unsuspecting StarCraft fanboys, teases new mouse, keyboard and headset

We wouldn’t go so far as to say that Razer is taking a note from the teasers over at Voodoo, but the gaming accessory outfit is definitely hoping to play on the emotions of anxious StarCraft fanatics. With the long (long!) awaited sequel finally nearing release, Razer has decided to link up with Blizzard in order to develop a new mouse, keyboard and headset designed specifically to cater to future StarCraft II gamers. For now, all we have to go on is the image above and whatever our imagination deems fit for believing, but we suspect all will be revealed when Blizzcon kicks off later this month. You can hardly wait, huh?

[Via HotHardware]

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Razer preys on unsuspecting StarCraft fanboys, teases new mouse, keyboard and headset originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 12 Aug 2009 03:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Razer to Develop StarCraft II-Branded Gear

Razer StarCraft Messenger Bag.JPG

Razer, the developer of the gaming-oriented Boomslang mouse and “gaming surfaces” for computer mice, announced that the company will manufacture so-called tournament-grade gaming peripherals emblazoned with the StarCraft II logo.

This will most likely be little more than an existing Razer mouse with some interesting artwork adorning the sides. But I’m interested in knowing what a “tournament-grade” StarCraft mouse will be based upon. As you may know, StarCraft is an obsession in some Asian countries, specifically Korea, and tournaments are televised. Blizzard’s new game (which is due “when it’s done,” according to the company) is sure to be feverishly awaited.

“It has been a little over a decade since StarCraft first rocked the video game industry and began a legacy that continues to this day,” said Robert “Razerguy” Krakoff, president of Razer USA, in a statement. “We’re extremely excited to be working with Blizzard Entertainment on the StarCraft II gaming peripherals and gear. The project is in the development phase with a focus on serving up innovative features while offering precision, cutting-edge technology, accuracy, speed and comfort.”

In the meantime, Razer said it would offer a StarCraft messenger bag (above) and E-Sport Pro Gamer Case.

Razer intros Orochi portable Bluetooth gaming mouse, fancy Kabuto surface

It’s been a few months since the reptile fanatics over at Razer dished out a new input peripheral, but the wait for yet another ends today with the introduction of the ambidextrous Orochi ($79.99; ships mid-August). Rather than shooting for the desktop gamer, the company is aiming squarely at the laptop crowd with its freshest portable Bluetooth laser mouse, which is the first to offer a 4,000dpi Razer Precision 3G laser sensor and dual-mode wired / wireless functionality. There’s also seven programmable buttons, Bluetooth 2.0 connectivity and on-board memory for setting up performance profiles. In related news, the outfit is also issuing a new gaming surface in the Razer Kabuto, an ultrathin, ultra-soft mat that’s probably nice, but not quite $19.99 nice.

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Razer intros Orochi portable Bluetooth gaming mouse, fancy Kabuto surface originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 23 Jul 2009 14:11:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Razer Delivers a Gaming Mouse for Notebooks

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News flash #1: Razer hasn’t run out of snake names yet. News flash #2: The gaming peripherals powerhouse is releasing a new mouse just for notebook users.

The Razer Orochi includes a 4000dpi laser sensor and can work either wired or wirelessly. In wireless mode, it connects with Bluetooth 2.0. Connect with a wire for better gaming response. It also has 7 programmable buttons and an ambidextrous design. Since it’s designed for portability, it comes with a carrying case.

Razer has also introduced the Kabuto gaming mat, with an ultra-thin profile and a microfiber tracking surface. A rubber base prevents it from sliding.

The Orochi will be available in mid-August for $79.99 and the Kabuto the same month for $19.99. Look for them on Razerzone.com.

Razer Launches the Moray+ Earphone

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Put away that bulky headset, gamers, because Razer has you covered. The company known for making the best gaming mice, keyboards, and surfaces has just announced the Moray+, an updated compact version of its Moray earphone.

With the Moray+, the product gains a lot of new functionality both for gaming and other applications. You’ll get an in-ear noise-isolating earphone with an omnidirectional microphone that’s just right for talking to friends while gaming.

The included case and compact design let you take the Moray+ anywhere. Because the mic offers exceptional voice clarity, it’s perfect for VOIP apps like Skype.

Use the Moray+ with your PC, your iPod, or any other portable. Three included adapters also let you plug in into your Sony PSP 2000/3000, Nintendo DS Lite/DSi, and devices with dual left and right audio ports. You’ll also get three flexible tips so that you can pick the one that fits your ear best.

Get the Moray+ for $59.99 from the Razer Web site.

Razer Introduces Sphex Mousing Skin

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PC gamers know that Razer makes high-performance mice that let them pivot and shoot faster, and ultra-slick surfaces for friction-free mousing. Now the company has introduced a new kind of surface, the Sphex desktop skin.

The Sphex differs from other surfaces because you can attach it and remove it from any surface, so it’s portable yet still high-quality. The skin measures 320 by 230 mm and has an adhesive bottom to grip to your desk. It’s ultra-thin, yet still offers excellent tracking quality.

The Sphex is currently available for pre-order for $14.99, and will ship June 1st. It promises a serious performance boost for not much money.

Razer Mamba vs. SideWinder X8: Wireless Gaming Mice Review

Gamers have avoided wireless mice like girls with cooties, fearing the grim fate of death and teabagging induced by milliseconds of lag. Razer’s Mamba and Microsoft SideWinder X8 promise total wireless freedom, sans teabagging.

Razer Mamba

Mamba is clearly Razer’s most carefully designed product yet. Even the packaging was clearly agonized over: The mouse is held aloft on a pedestal inside an acrylic cube, which has a shelf system built into it holding parts like the battery, power cable and charging stand.

But the design is only part of why you’re paying $130—it’s to make you feel good about dropping that kind of cash. You’re paying that much because Razer says it’s the first wireless mouse that’s actually gaming grade, with a latency of just 1ms—twice as fast as other wireless mice, and the same 1000Hz polling rate as their own wired mice. In other words, they’re promising zero lag while taking the gaming mouse DPI wars to the unwanted and ridiculous new level of 5,600 DPI.

It uses 2.4GHz for wireless, just like Microsoft’s SideWinder X8 and Logitech’s now old-school G7 (and every other wireless device) but supposedly Mamba detects and avoids noisy channels to skirt by interference. In this respect, does live up to the hype—at least when you’ve got sufficient juice. After using it in a couple weekends of Team Fortress 2 and Left 4 Dead, I really didn’t notice any response difference between it and my wired mouse. It’s perfectly lag-free and twitchily responsive. Wakeup is also surprisingly quick, or at least it was with the 1.02 firmware—it seems a bit slower with the 1.03 update, which is designed to improve battery life. I also never noticed any interference, despite running in close proximity to my dual-band router and the X8, actually.

Where the polish rubs off and shows some rough patches are on the battery and software front. Razer claims 72 hours of “normal gaming usage” and 14 hours of continuous gaming. I didn’t quite have the balls to game for 14 hours straight, but with Razer’s 1.02 firmware, I never got more than 48 hours of what I’d call normal usage battery life, and when it drops to that last bar of battery, it does not play well at all. They’ve since released firmware 1.03, which is supposed to improve battery life. Installing the update on Vista 64-bit is something of an arcane science (Update: Razer wanted me to note that the process is a just a simple installer with XP and Vista 32, and that new mice will have 1.03 already on it). You have to boot into a mode where it accepts drivers that aren’t digitally signed, and then the update process itself requires a second mouse. The configurator software, while it provides a full-featured set of options, is not as responsive as I’d like—it takes a bit to read the mouse’s settings (which are stored onboard) and longer still to change them.

When your battery does get low, you can plug the USB cable into the mouse to play and charge, turning it into a standard wired mouse with the same 1ms latency. It pops easily out of the charging cube/wireless receiver, but for some reason it tends to fight you to avoid plugging into the mouse, which is my biggest problem with the otherwise smart modular design.

Ergonomically, it’s one of the best mice around. It’s essentially a lighter version of Razer’s DeathAdder, though with the addition of a new groove for your pinkie, which took me a little bit to get used to. My only problem with the button placement is that the DPI selection buttons are not distinct enough, so if you’re trying to quickly drop the DPI down to precisely snipe someone’s head off, you might crank it up instead and shoot the guy in the foot. The texture is a nice use of rubber—it’s not super sticky and rubbery, so your hand doesn’t feel weird and gross if it gets sweaty, but it does give you a solid grip.

Shape and texture feel fantastic

Smart design touches throughout

Response time is perfect

Battery life not so great

Firmware updating process is a pain on Vista 64. for now anyway

$130 is pricey!

SideWinder X8

The design apparently still outsourced to the Empire’s mice and keyboard division, Microsoft’s third SideWinder mouse cuts the cable and improves on the series in a lot of little ways that add up to making it the best SideWinder yet.

As I suspected when I eyeballed it, ergonomically it’s finally designed for humans. The sharp spine has been softened into a far more pleasant hump, though it retains the same overall shame as the past two. (It’s huge.) So, it’s not as sleek as the Mamba, but they have finally nailed the way it should feel in your hand. The unorthodox vertical thumb buttons have been reshaped into ergonomic slopes that form a groove for your thumb, so after the initial adjustment period, this touch finally works. The metal scroll wheel isn’t super fantastico to use a lot, but the on-the-fly DPI buttons have a good placement in the middle, but need to be larger—it’s too easy to hit the wrong one. The textured plastic feels a little cheap, too.

It uses 2.4GHz wireless at a 500Hz polling rate (half of Mamba’s) and can crank the DPI up to 4000. Playing the same games as I did with Mamba—TF2 and L4D—again, I never noticed any real difference in response versus my usual wired mouse. In other words, it seemed lag-free to me. On the DPI front, you can only pick between three steps at a time—not five, like on the Mamba or on-the-fly. One superior touch over the Mamba is the built-in LCD that displays your DPI setting—on Mamba you have to decode what the combination of green and red bars on the side mean. On the other hand, try to find where it displays battery life. (I couldn’t.) Speaking of, the battery life is vastly superior to Mamba—I got over five solid days with four intense three-hour gaming sessions on a single charge.

If you had to pick a headlining technical feature (since Mamba also eclipsed its 4000DPI crown), it’d probably be that it uses Microsoft’s BlueTrack technology which can track on anything. Indeed, it worked perfectly on multiple surfaces, including a a glossy plastic SteelSeries SP pad that Mamba wouldn’t touch at all. (My standard surface is the cloth SteelSeries QcK+, in case you’re wondering.) So if you game on crazy surfaces, BlueTrack is a definite check in the X8’s column.

The charging dock/receiver is more functional and less “ooooh” than Razer’s—it’s a hockey puck with a groove for wrapping the cable. But what’s neato is that the play-and-charge cable attaches to the mouse magnetically so there’s no trying to cram it into a stubborn hole like on the Mamba.

Improved ergonomics over last-gen

Long battery life

Good response time

Shape and vertical buttons an acquired taste

Positioning of the hump for your hand makes it feel ginormous

There Can Be Only One?

Can you cut the cord and achieve sweet, wireless freedom while feeling safe that your fragging powers are undiminished? Yep. Response time felt the same for every mouse I used: X8, Mamba and my wired mice. Which means two things: Gaming-grade wireless is here (just in case you doubted it), and performance isn’t the reason you should pick the Mamba over the X8.

Mamba has better design, feels better (especially if you have smaller hands) and more functional software. The SideWinder X8 has longer battery life, less finicky software and it’s much cheaper. You can get the X8 for about $75, while Mamba is very much $130. As always, whether or not the frills of gaming gear is worth the extra scratch is up to you, and this is more true here than usual, given the price gap. [Razer, Microsoft]

Engadget’s recession antidote: win a Razer Mamba, Carcharias and case!

This whole global economic crisis, and its resulting massive loss of jobs got us thinking. We here at Engadget didn’t want to stand helplessly by, announcing every new round of misery without giving anything back — so we decided to take the opportunity to spread a little positivity. We’ll be handing out a new gadget every day (except for weekends) to lucky readers until we run out of stuff / companies stop sending things. Today we’ve got a swank Razer Collector’s Kit, which includes a Bond-like briefcase, a Razer Mamba gaming mouse and a Carcharias headset (among other Razer-branded goodies). Read the rules below (no skimming — we’re omniscient and can tell when you’ve skimmed) and get commenting! Hooray for free stuff!

Huge thanks to Razer for providing the gear!

The rules:

  • Leave a comment below. Any comment will do, but if you want to share your proposal for “fixing” the world economy, that’d be sweet too.
  • You may only enter this specific giveaway once. If you enter this giveaway more than once you’ll be automatically disqualified, etc. (Yes, we have robots that thoroughly check to ensure fairness.)
  • If you enter more than once, only activate one comment. This is pretty self explanatory. Just be careful and you’ll be fine.
  • Contest is open to anyone in the 50 States, 18 or older! Sorry, we don’t make this rule (we hate excluding anyone), so be mad at our lawyers and contest laws if you have to be mad.
  • Winner will be chosen randomly. The winner will receive one (1) Razer Collector’s Kit with one Mamba mouse, one Carcharias headset, one nearly bulletproof case and some random Razer schwag. Approximate retail value is $230.
  • If you are chosen, you will be notified by email. Winners must respond within three days of the end of the contest. If you do not respond within that period, another winner will be chosen.
  • Entries can be submitted until Monday, April 8th, at 11:59PM ET. Good luck!
  • Full rules can be found here.

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Engadget’s recession antidote: win a Razer Mamba, Carcharias and case! originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 08 Apr 2009 12:10:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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