Tuesday, August 17th 2010
Roccat Intros Kone[+] Gaming Mouse with 6000 dpi Sensor
Roccat rolled out its latest mouse that's a design and specifications update to its popular Kone mouse, the Roccat Kone[+]. The Kone[+] boasts of a high-precision 6,000 dpi Pro-Aim laser sensor compared to the 3,200 dpi sensor on the Kone; and a Tracking & Distance Control Unit that ensures maximum precision. With a right-handed orientation, the Kone[+] has 8 buttons with a four-way scroll-wheel, its weight is adjustable by changing weight of a weight box. The EasyShift button mapping system enables up to 22 functions using the 8 physical buttons, button-maps can be changed on the mouse, and each map can be indicated with the multi-color LED lighting bars that flow along the contours of the mouse. Under the hood is a 75 MHz TurboCore processor that reduces system overhead, and 576 KB of memory to store button maps. Poised for release later this month, the Kone[+] from Roccat will be priced at around 80 EUR.
27 Comments on Roccat Intros Kone[+] Gaming Mouse with 6000 dpi Sensor
Why put them above the thumb rather than in line with it?
6000 dpi is just insane though! I think you'd need a 2560x1600 rezo to take advantage of that sort of precision.
The same way raw graphics performance isn't enough for gfx cards though, I don't think raw dpi numbers are enough for mice. Need more features & better design now, as well as hybridising them (making them with wired and wireless functionality).
I had a Roccat Kone and I had to RMA it 3 times, until I got fed up with Roccat's build quality and asked for my money back.
6000 dpi lol I wonder you can set ingame sensitivity that low to be able to play on that :)
EDIT: I thought that round thing on the side/buttom is the side button ?! Huh ?
However, 4-way scroll wheel is the most annoying thing on a mice that could ever be made, so seriously anti-kudos for this.
..another contender in sh*t-mouse race using world worst gaming sensor = Avago 9500. Today interpolated to sh*ty 6000 DPi. Thats sure win for ROCCAT and sure fail for any progamer.
Have fun and stay away from that sh*t, bro!
(only gaming mouse usable with this is G9x and its very limited use, cause even if it has very little of problems common to Avago 9500, it still has them, I can only suggest buying Razer, even with that Z-tracking problem.. still better)
Fair enough it they fail with the Kone, or mice in general.
@caleb: Did you mistake the "weight box" for the buttons?
I'm complaining that they made an excellent contour for your thumb, then make you have to move your thumb right out of it to press the thumb buttons!:wtf:
It's a good as making a bike with a great seat, then making it impossible to peddle while sitting...
"self-adjusting frame rate for optimum performance"
What it basicly does is, that it changes mouse speed by itself. Some manufacturers (Logitech) managed to negate this thing pretty good, some others (SteelSeries) probably left it as it is resulting in quite noticable jumps in speed.
You can imagine how annoying is, when you play and suddenly you feel like you just lost around 600 DPi.
Manufacturers of mices share lots of parts, probably cause there is only like two manufacturers of gaming capable laser and optical sensors, namely Avago and Phillips. Some mices share even complete inside, just outer shell is different. Usually those less known.
There are some rumours about positive acceleration of Avago 9500, cant confirm that, but I guess they just mistaken this "self-adjusting framrate" for that. Cause what it basicly do is, that it speeds up and down mice.. (it changes scanning rate of mouse, but result is same).
Yea and top of that, all mices based on this suffer from real DPi change by itself, it seems more noticable after you use mouse (for example G9x) for longer period of time (like after few months, or half a year). And I have feeling its getting worse, which means that sensor have some kind of limited lifetime or what.. Definetly not happy with that now.
And to add more crappiness, they interpolate 5040 DPi to 6000 via SW.. great, as if it wasnt bad before.. I had Gigabyte Ghost GM-M8000X for review, which has same sensor and same interpolation and 6000 is nicely and totaly unusable.
Hate this marketing sh*t, its same as megapixels in compact cameras, worth nothing, only degrading image further.
Checking DPi and response can be done, but I simply believe my senses. :) And I tend to use reviewed mouse or HW at least for month, so all flaws came out (or positive things).
FW failure can be, but when these mices all share same flaws, its hardly FW thing.
For comparsion how good or bad mouse is, is good to have DeathAdder V1 with FW which has disabled prediction and all that SW stuff, you will get very very accurate mouse. Probably best ever made, well, except fact that I cant use it due ergonomics, but that doesnt make it worse. Just not for me and still has best sensor I ever used.
Or not.
Lower sens = higher accuracy.....when will people learn this. :shadedshu
Lol, they're making high dpi mice, and extra large mousepads!
Moving this mouse from one side to the other of the mousepad will move the cursor from England to Japan! LOL!
I'm like you in that I can't use a mouse knowing it has tracking problems. I bought the Xai purely as a desktop mouse and I can see its issues (jitter due to dust or whatever). I also used Mouse Movement Recorder and can see the tracking issue. I have a clan mate who doesn't pay attention to this stuff and just uses what is the next best thing and his aim is just as good as it was with the IE 3.0 and Razer Krait/Diamondback Plasma Limited Edition. His aim is better than mine. I do think these tests are important but don't make or break how good you are at a game, which is how some people tend to use them (myself included).