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번역 관련 문제 보고
The G403 would be my pick if I use a palm grip, it's about the same weight. Palm grip and heavy weight G502 is also a good choice.
There is also an excellent guide from RJN, Find a Mouse[www.rocketjumpninja.com] which is a compilation of mice he reviews and has loose recommendations about hand size and grip type - worth checking out along with his top 40[www.rocketjumpninja.com] listing.
No drivers needed, plug and play
Ergonomic design exclusively for right-handed users
Optical mouse with optimal lift-off distance
400/ 800/ 1600/ 3200 DPI adjustment
Adjustable USB report rate 125/ 500/ 1000 Hz
Operating system: Win2000/XP/VISTA/7/8/10; Mac OS X v10.2
The Razer mice have a smoother scroll feel (which I personally don't like) and are more durable (in my experience).
I prefer the SteelSeries for the stronger scroll feel. I can easily count the steps to stop exactly where I need.
Never picked a Logitech mouse because of all those buttons getting in the way. For what I'm usually playing, I just need 3.
WTF are you talking about.
Go to the Store and hold one in your hand. You touch a mouse at all times with finger tips, nothing else.
Do you have twig arms or something. Those mice are light as a feather.
All good mice weight right around what that one does.
A good mouse takes up your entire hand. If you have to scrunch your finger tips, this will give you pain and hurt you over time; doing permanent damage to your hand/thumb/wrist.
You can customize the weight.
I'd go for the G502 is I recommended it earlier and have had it for years. Its even survived me taking it apart to dry it out after spilling drinks on it twice :D
as you mentioned weight earlier the G502 comes with 5x3.6gram weights you can add/remove to the base in various combinations making it lighter/heavier as you prefer. Though I never felt the need to use any of them myself.
The G903 (and G900 if that's the same but with the different mouse pads? I don't remember) is a great mouse especially for being wireless. It weight a tiny bit more because of that but.
I think the G502 is a bit larger, maybe G403 is fine. G Pro got a good sensor and G102/203 doesn't have the same sensor but still a good one, just 10 million clicks switches but it's cheaper.
Rival 310 have the good sensor and 30 million click switches and is ergonomical in it's design and Owl-Eye I don't remember what it have but likely a good sensor and at-least 20 million click switches too.
I would touch them and the Zowie mice if I were you and pick the one you think feel the best but if you are paying €60 anyway I'd look at the SteelSeries Rival 310 and Roccat whatever it's called Owl-Eye too (It's a Kona/Kone?)
If you want wire-less then there's really nothing wrong with the G903, except maybe 10-15 grams or so but it's still not heavy.
I have the G203 but I once ordered the Sensei 310 for the same price and hardware wise that gave much more for the money but I don't like the shape of it. G203 is a bit thin for me though so maybe Rival 310 would had worked better. I've got used to the G203 though. But the G203 don't have the same sensor as the higher numbered Logitech mice and it only have the 10 million click switches so it would seem like it will fail earlier than those. It's small and light and still have a good sensor though. Though not necessarily the best.
G903, Rival 310, Owl-Eye will all have great sensors.
G900s aren't that great. I owned one through the end of last year and didn't like it very much. It had an excellent sensor, but the grip ergonomics were kinda terrible and it didn't have any of the features I would expect/demand from a mouse of that price.
It was designed for huge man-hands, and like a lot of Ambidextrous mice it felt uncomfortable whether you were right or left handed. I found it genuinely uncomfortable and couldn't be rid of it soon enough.
I know Swiftpoint are an acquired taste, but if you want a top-tier performance mouse I do recommend their Z. Now that I've gotten used to it, it's the best mouse I've ever owned by a long margin.
Although it looks odd, the grip feels extremely natural and comfortable to me. Having flat mouse buttons and four points of contact makes it very accurate, especially in horizontal aiming. The button count is equivalent to an MMO mouse, but they're clustered around the primary buttons instead of on the side. That takes a little getting used to, but once you're familiar it works very well. DPI is adjustable via the scroll wheel, which is a brilliant touch. I can't believe nobody else thought of that.