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Price, Performance, And Conclusion

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Even the cheapest gaming mouse will run you between $30 and $40, and the best can cost much more than that. Quality gaming headsets can run well over $100, and the most expensive single product in the roundup, Logitech's G19 gaming keyboard, is almost $200.

If you have the money to spend on gear like this, then the price isn't likely to keep you from buying the things you want. But if you're concerned about getting bang for your buck with regard to performance, you may want to ease into the market more carefully and pick mid-range products. See if they really make a difference for you before sinking additional funds on peripherals.

While some of the products in this roundup have features that are, at worst, helpful in some games and, at best, nearly essential in specific titles, the amount of money you have to shell out in order to procure them may not be worthwhile for you, especially when you could take the cash for a programmable keyboard you'll never actually take the time to configure and use it to buy a few more games.

If you're already a fan of gaming peripherals, you're probably already jaded about how expensive they are. There are some notable exceptions, though. I felt that, in the gamepad category, you really do get what you pay for when you bump up from the mid-range to the high-end.

Gaming mice are another exception. Moving from a standard multi-button mouse to a heavier, ergonomically-designed gaming mouse will pay dividends. However, even with gaming mice, the price-to-performance gets difficult to justify when you start finding gaming mice that sell solely on their DPI sensitivity and cost upwards of $100. You'll likely never use the highest DPI settings, and you likely won't notice the performance difference between the top of the class and the second or third runner-up. At that price point, what really matters is whether the mouse feels good to you and works for the way you game.

Conclusion

The goal of this round-up was to determine whether or not premium gaming peripherals really improve your performance, especially compared to standard I/O devices that cost less (and might even come bundled with your machine), but don't include as many twitch-controlling extras. Keeping our tested peripherals spread across similar levels of quality and price helped ensure we weren't comparing diamonds to coal.

The answer is, predictably, that "it depends." Whether or not you should shell out the cash on premium peripherals depends highly on the types of games you play, how engaged you are in those games, and whether or not you see yourself actually getting the value out of those peripherals. For example, if you're a heavy World of Warcraft player, you'll find that programmable macro keys on your keyboard are absolutely indispensable, and the more you use them the more you love them. When you love them that much, you may not mind spending over $100 for a keyboard that supports them. Can you play without them? Sure, but you'll miss them when you do (and your guildmates may not enjoy your performance as much). On the other hand, if you're a heavy FPS player, and games like Crysis and Call of Duty are your favorite titles, you may not find much use in having a dozen programmable keys on the side of your keyboard. 

The same conclusion applies to gamepads. I normally don't play with one, but when I did, there were certain games in which I found them incredibly useful and others where I could take them or leave them. While I can  see how addictive using a gamepad could be, it really comes down to whether or not you think one would be useful for the games you play, and whether you play those games enough to make the purchase worthwhile.

Whether or not you should shell out money for a premium headset relies not just on the types of games you play but how serious you are about audio quality outside of games. If you're primarily using a headset to occasionally chat with friends during a raid or coordinate among teammates in a multiplayer shooter, you may not care about a headset that delivers rich bass when playing music. If you're serious about audio and voice quality, and if you plan to use your headset for more than just gaming (podcasting, audio recording, etc.), you would do well to pony up and get something on the high-end.

Gaming mice is the only category for which I can solidly suggest that everyone ditch their flimsy mouse and pick up something nicer. The difference in manufacturing quality between the types of mice you're likely to find at the bottom of your local IT guru's file cabinet and the ones that come in packages bragging about sensors and programmable buttons is more than noticeable.

In the end, not a single one of the peripherals I tested, although they were by and large excellent products, would transform a new PC gamer into an expert who could go toe to toe with someone who's been playing for a long time. No keyboard in the world will turn your guild's worst healer into the best with the help of some programmable macros. No gamepad will turn you from a spray-and-pray FPS player into a top-scoring sniper. And no gaming mouse, no matter how high the DPI sensitivity, will make combat in The Witcher easier to handle.

What premium gaming peripherals do is help you customize your playing experience to the way you want to play. If your mouse is too light and flimsy, maybe a Logitech G9 or Gigabyte GM-M8000, with their customizable weight cartridges, will help you find the right balance and heft. If no one's laughing at your jokes over TeamSpeak because you sound washed out, The Razer Megalodon headset gives you discrete control over the microphone sensitivity on the control brick. None of these peripherals will improve your performance all by themselves, but if you have the money to spend and you buy the right product at the right price with the right features for the way you play, you'll have more fun gaming, to be sure.

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plasmastorm 30/11/2009 23:41
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Nice review on the Lachesis, Have one myself for arounf a year now. Can't say i've had any of the dust problems you described although I did once have to pull a hair out of the sensor.
Trya good hard mouse mat rather than the fabric type that soak up dust.
Im using a destructor pad from Razer and never been happier.

Anonymous 01/12/2009 10:28
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just for the information, the 64bit problem can be solved by plugging the megalodon into a usb hub instead of directly to the pc. I havent had any issues since.

mi1ez 01/12/2009 11:02
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Surely the XBox 360 should be in there as a gamepad...

mi1ez 01/12/2009 14:40
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mi1ez :
Surely the XBox 360 should be in there as a gamepad...


heh. You can tell who commented from the first page! *facepalm*

silicondoc 09/05/2010 18:20
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The Saitek Cyborg keyboard is great. Lighting works especially well since you can choose regions for different coloring, which helps keeps your awareness of the keys at maximum in lighted conditions or at night.
The keys feel good, plenty of feedback, and the wrist ledge is excellent as well as the slant angles allowed.
It's heavy and well made compared to everything else nowadays.
Keys do not wear off, and it is not a grease or debris magnet either.
If you're not a tiny framed spindle handed geek, this is the one to get.

Anonymous 10/09/2010 06:39
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Ah, Gaming Peripherals :bounce:




I like Razer. Thanks to them I now have anger issues. I frequently smash my fist to my desk in a joyous manifestation of how much my hardware pleases me.
I have actually cried once or twice.
And because said hardware was so reasonably priced, I don't have money to replace it. Yay.
That's probably because I bought this mouse for £42.99 and also the Razer Lycosa Keyboard for £52.99 and also the Razer Goliathus Gaming Surface for £12.99. That's a meagre amount of almost £110.
I like the mouse's eyes.
And the way it stutters and lags and freezes
You want a gaming experience Razer?
I was once playing Half-Life Deathmatch, I got killed.
Lots. Because I couldn't move the crosshair due to a malfunction, the malfunction being that my mouse couldn't be bothered to do what I told it.

The keyboard was once glossy, I cleaned it with a glasses cleaner cloth the day I got it -Oops, I scratched it. I had fun enduring the next year, with a dust covered keyboard (at least I couldn't see the scratches anymore :D), the keys, being some strange, furry, matte black material, gather all the spunk from when I'm jerking off, which I then can't wipe away for risk of scratching the gloss. The blue backlighting of the keys and the black of the keyboard plays a kind of stereogram trick on my eyes at night, and renders them useless during daylight as the LED's aren't bright enough. The CAPS LOCK and num lock (and that other one) buttons LED indicators are so bright I can still see them winking at me from below as I look at the screen. The media section in the top right seemingly has no LED's and as a result I cannot see any of them, and generally just for sh*ts and laughs every now and then, I smush my hand over it to see what happens. I often accidentally press the LED Profile switch and have to cycle back. The hand rest slope bit at the nearest end to my body serves only to annoy and bruise the outside of my wrists. The on-board USB port never seems to work off the bat or at all and the headphone mini-jacks next to the USB port require my typing fingers to fight with the lead that trails over my keyboard to my ears. The USB connector that connects the keybard to my pc, has lots of wickle fwends. There's Mr and Mrs's USB, and the baby twins, Audio and Microphone Jack. They all have lovely days and nights clogging up all my ports like a bad case of the Flu.

The Gaming surface, is a massive beer mat.

Which is lovely.

For £12.99.

A cardboard alternative just wouldn't have soaked up my Budweiser drippage like this does.

Spectacular.

It's like they researched it or something.

It gives me rashes.
On my hands.

Oh and if you love it when people dog ear books or your house mat curls at the edges, the gaming surface does it to stop gravity taking the said *beverage of your choice* drippage onto your desk. Obviously.

Oh and the mouse has the same gloss black and furry matte black as the keyboard. There are two actually useful buttons under your thumb. The scroller is cool, lights up and clicks down. But then there are two button on the top, in line with the scroller, nearest your palm though, that I cannot physically reach with the middle finger (that I might use more wisely right now) that I use to scroll and right click. There are two buttons on the furthest side that exactly mirror the useful ones on the other side. These ones are useful too, and I click them with the extra finger I have to the right of my little pinky.
Oh and just to throw it into the mix, the resource hogging config's are useless and assign the strangest things to the most useless keys. For example, the mouse has one of it's numerous buttons assigned to profile change. I love it when I accidentally hit that during a game, or when I'm using Photoshop and drawing a line or dragging something on my desktop and for around ten seconds the mouse is even more useless and I cannot move the cursor. And then my new profile (like its facbook or something) is enabled.

Yeah. I needed this feature so badly, it's why I programmed the first one to do exactly what I need. And also why they gave us those extra buttons. So... wait, was I against or against this feature?

£110 and 18 months later, I'm happily smashing my desk and throwing things around the room. Finding new drivers, new firmware, new tips, new tweaks, new hardware, new software, clean pants and socks, a t-shirt for the day and a shirt for the night, new config layouts/set-ups and new operating systems.

I'm so happy you're happy Razer. Thank you.

Type. Click.

Anonymous 05/02/2011 13:07
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I have Razer Piranha, really good headset.

xiaodada 20/03/2012 08:45
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well since you can choose regions for different coloring, which helps keeps your awareness of the keys at maximum in lighted conditions or at night.

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