Best type of mousepad for SC2? - Page 4
Forum Index > Tech Support |
firefistAce
United States137 Posts
| ||
slained
Canada966 Posts
| ||
PlaGuE_R
France1151 Posts
I like it | ||
Subversion
South Africa3627 Posts
| ||
butter
United States785 Posts
| ||
semantics
10040 Posts
Frankly i use an ergonomic mouse and a wrist rest set at a really high dpi. I only need like a 6 x 6 inch pad to fit my purposes I'm never going to be the best and i don't need to fuck up my hand trying to do so. | ||
ALang
Canada288 Posts
| ||
Bosu
United States3247 Posts
| ||
Stark838
Philippines15 Posts
| ||
Mofisto
United Kingdom585 Posts
| ||
Terranist
United States2496 Posts
| ||
Obsolescence
United States270 Posts
On October 08 2010 10:09 TheGiftedApe wrote: Well, I have only used regular mouse pads/ hard surfaces before I bought this: http://www.rocketfishproducts.com/products/computers/RF-MSEPAD.html I haven't used any other "pro mouse pads" so I'm limited, but As a graphic artist, who uses a mouse A LOT, and can tell when my mouse is jumping even the SLIGHTEST bit, I have to say, I IMMEDIATLEY FELL IN LOVE, with this dual sided rocketfish mousepad... I have used that Rocket Fish mouse-pad, however, like the teflon feet on the bottom of your mouse, the surface of the plastic will gain scratches over time and imho wear down the feet on your mouse faster. Now I use this: [Found Here] It is huge (can be cut to desired dimensions), and so frictionless your mouse will glide across it almost like an air hockey table. It is cloth, but assuming you aren't a biological hazard, there shouldn't be any issue with cloth mouse-pads. Also, even marginal quality cloth mouse-pads shouldn't be 'squishy' as someone suggested they were (did you find your mouse-pad in a moist dumpster?). I'm somewhat picky about my mouse / mouse-pad. I've probably gone through 6-10 mouse-pads in 4-5 years and this one is the very best I've experienced. Another plus, at $13 you could do far worse for price. | ||
Intricate
Canada127 Posts
| ||
TheImmortal
Hong Kong84 Posts
On October 14 2010 02:37 Intricate wrote: i use the steel series QcK with the Kerrigan vs Zeratul art. really love the feel of the mouse pad and its really easy to bring around. I even use it in school lol. I use a Logitech G500 over it and gives me really smooth control. Also, its only $15 bucks =P i pretty much use the same thing. qck mass with G500. i prefer a thicker mat as my previous one was thick too. one thing i don't like regarding the mouse pad, it's way too big. i never move my hand when i play games. | ||
Manit0u
Poland17153 Posts
| ||
Cube
Canada777 Posts
| ||
Zaixer
Sweden82 Posts
| ||
Alternity
United States74 Posts
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16826997028&cm_re=mousepad-_-26-997-028-_-Product It works well for me. Nice surface, almost as big as the qck heavy. Seems like my g900 tracks well on it. Cheap :D. What more can you want? | ||
Demi9OD
United States56 Posts
On October 14 2010 04:02 Zaixer wrote: I have a Razer Goliathus Control. It got pretty low static friction for a cloth pad which is very important. I have tried a plastic pad with with amazing glide but i had to switch because i couldn't click without moving the mouse Exactly why the control is such a fantastic mousepad. It takes an almost identical amount of force to begin moving the mouse from a stand still, as it does to keep moving it. This consistency is not the norm for a cloth mouse pad, and is usually only reserved for plastic pads. But as you've said the plastic pads can be so slick that you make inadvertent movements and overshoot. Hard pads also tend to wear down unevenly if they are textured. I would love to get my hands on a Puretrak talent and some of those Zowie pads, they are supposed to have low static friction as well. | ||
FoxSpirit
Austria160 Posts
And I am not kidding. You can hardly ask for more. Huge surfacearea , a really good mixture of grip/speed and cleaning is super easy. Any of those work really well with my MX-518. | ||
| ||