![]() ![]() As it comes with a non-removable rechargeable battery, I found that the battery life when wireless less than ideal requiring me to charge it at least once every 2 days. My only drawback about this mouse would be it’s battery life. Unless you are a pro gamer or really very rich, this is just one of those features that are nice to have. Armed with the Razer Synapse, the software allows anyone to save their keybinds into the cloud and seamless transition to another gaming computer / setup elsewhere. I’ve not been able to find a colour that the mouse has issues recreating but if you do come across one I’m game to give it a go. All you would need is the specific colour code. You have pretty much full range over any colour in the pantone chart to recreate. The next best thing about this mouse would be its interchangeable colours. Thankfully, there’s a less complex Razer mouse out there for that. ![]() DOTA also prides itself on being more precise than WoW and having so many buttons could increase the margin of error. For more adept DOTA players, I would think that the Naga would be overkill considering the number of buttons available. Being the only other game that I play that would require that many keybinds, the Naga came in handy as well. Out of World of Warcraft, the mouse functioned perfectly well for other games such as DOTA. In Warlords of Draenor, having 9 keys on your left plus movement, 9 keys on the right with shift modifiers making it a total of 18, is more than sufficient for even the average LFR charity Epic scrub aka myself. In between, the shift modifier worked well to give me those extra few buttons that worked inconjunction with the right thumb. I had it setup so that I would press at most 9 keys (or less) on the left and assigning the rest to the right thumb. By delegating some of the work to my right thumb, the Naga affords me to focus more on movement on the left and a few more keybinds. At times, too many keys to press led to premature cooldown usage leading to wipes. In the past, playing World of Warcraft made my left hand far more dexterous than my right master hand. Thankfully, that means that there’s reduced ‘piano-playing’ and more focused button-pressing.īetween global cooldowns, there is ample time for me as a tank to shimmy from one button to the next aided by only the thumb. I remember a time where World of Warcraft had way more keys to actually press and with subsequent releases it seems that there has been less and less need for the Naga with its 12 thumb keys. With that out of the way, it was back to more rebinding and getting used to the new layout. ![]() Solution? Rebound my autorun and kept the num pad permanently on. Commonly, the numlock key would be used to toggle auto run, and with that toggled on and off at times, threw a spanner into how the Naga functioned in my case. Initially, I would come into occasions in which the keybinds would not respond but I learnt that this was due to user error. It isn’t rocket science but I found that the most hassle-free set up was to bind the Naga keys to mirror the num pad keys. In order to do so, I started off with the bartender mod and rearranging all my hotbars to reflect the keybinds that I had set up on the Naga itself. The first thing that all new Naga users would like to do is simply clear out all their existing keybinds, as this gives you the perfect setting to actually break out of your old regime and start retraining your muscle memory. All-in-all, I estimated that I would have spent at least 30 hours of in-game time across all three tanks with the mouse while leveling and clearing top level content. As I clearly enjoy the abuse, all three classes were tanks and this gave me ample opportunity to work through the learning curve of handling both a new class and a new mouse in-hand. In order to review this mouse thoroughly, I leveled three classes from 85 to 100. ![]()
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