The ZELOTES T-90 Wired USB Optical Game Mouse features a unique 7 colors cycling effect lighting system and DPI up to 9200. It offers good stability and accuracy via great tracking precision and a high max speed. And it has an ergonomic shape, making it great for users for long time use without fatigue.
The Zelotes T90 might just be right up your alley. In terms of precision, the T90 features 6 DPI levels which you can interchange on the fly. You can shift between 1000, 1600, 2400, 3200, 5500 and 9200 DPI. Each DPI gear has a designated LED colour so you’ll know which one you’re using with just a quick glance. It also has a 500Hz polling rate which means it has a response time of 2 milliseconds.
The T90 also has built-in weights that you can fine tune in order to deliver the best balance possible. It comes with 8 buttons, ergonomic design and a 7-cycle light mode. It has a built-in memory chip where you can save your profiles for different games.
With excellent ABS material, exquisite treatment progress and careful assembly, the whole performance of the mouse improved a lot. Braided cable is well built with reinforcement at the mouse end to prevent it from fraying.
QUICK THUMB FUNCTION
Fast forward or backwards when browsing the web, forward or backward at the same folder window.
FIRE KEY
Short press to double click, long press more than 2 seconds to switch triple click, light flashes 3 times represents successfully switched.
COMPATIBLE SYSTEM
Compatible with Windows7, Windows 8, Windows XP, Vista, ME,2000, Mac OS and other OS. Connecting with an available USB port.
PLEASE NOTE
We've done this a few times and it always seems to go over well. Why wouldn't it? You're getting some serious bang for your buck (as the saying goes), and we're using the profits to stock our offices with fancy coffee.
Win win.
It does leave us horribly short on the word count for this here write up, though. Explaining how a 50% discount works doesn't exactly require your undivided attention.
So instead we'll hit you with this little-known fact: Movie trailers are called "trailers" because they used to be shown at the end of the movies, not before. Eventually common sense prevailed, but the name stuck.
Knowledge!