ASUS Launches ROG Spatha MMO Gaming Mouse
ASUS Republic of Gamers announced Spatha, a wired/wireless gaming mouse optimized for massively-multiplayer online (MMO) games. ROG Spatha has a sensitivity of 8200 dots per inch (DPI) and features 12 programmable buttons. It has a magnesium-alloy chassis, left and right buttons with the ASUS-exclusive easy-swap switchable socket design, as well as programmable RGB LED effects. When used in wired mode, it features an industry-leading 2000 Hz rolling rate for smooth, instantaneous cursor response.
ROG Spatha is the proud recipient of a prestigious 2016 Red Dot Design Award, recognizing Spatha's design excellence and innovation.
Intuitive command and control
With a total of 12 programmable buttons, including six thumb buttons situated on the left side of the mouse body, ROG Spatha puts all commands at the user's fingertips. The six buttons feature Alps switches for tactile feedback and are arranged to resemble the iconic ROG eye.
ROG Spatha has a premium magnesium-alloy chassis and an easy-swap switch socket design for quick customization. The main left and right mouse buttons are independent of the mouse body and feature OMRON switches with a 20-million-click lifespan for increased durability, responsiveness, and tactile feedback.
ROG Spatha has a sensitivity of 8200 DPI; it has a DPI clutch that lets users switch between two sensitivity levels while in the middle of a game.
Dual modes for additional flexibility
Whether used in wired or wireless mode, ROG Spatha provides precise and instantaneous cursor response. In wireless mode, ROG Spatha uses a high-speed wireless connection for high data throughput and low latency.
ROG Spatha gives a polling rate of up to 2000 Hz in wired mode. A special raised connector design prevents the cable from dragging on the desk to ensure a smooth glide across any surface. ROG Spatha can be charged in wired mode, or when placed in its charging dock. It comes bundled with a braided 2 m cable and a 1 m rubber cable.
Customizable LED effects and ROG Armoury
ROG Spatha has an aggressive angular design with independently customizable RGB LED effects on the scroll wheel, side buttons, and ROG logo. It offers six different presets - Static, Breathing, Color Cycling, Trigger, Random, and Battery mode. ROG Spatha has built-in flash memory to save five different user profiles. The intuitive ROG Armoury dashboard lets users customize profiles, LED effects settings, program macros, and more.
ASUS Launches B150I and B150M Pro Gaming Aura Series Motherboards - 02/03/2016 09:45 AM
ASUS launches B150I Pro Gaming/WiFi/Aura, B150I Pro Gaming/Aura and B150M Pro Gaming, three new small-form-factor gaming motherboards packed with exclusive features and the latest technologies to ma...
ASUS Launches 970 Pro Gaming Aura Socket AM3+ Motherboard w/ SLI support - 01/26/2016 03:19 PM
ASUS announced 970 Pro Gaming/Aura, the first motherboard based on the AMD 970+SB950 chipset, with official NVIDIA SLI certification for epic up to quad-GPU graphics, plus integrated Aura RGB - the ne...
ASUS Launches ROG 10G Express 10Gbps Ethernet expansion Card - 11/09/2015 01:21 PM
ASUS is releasing extras intended for the ROG Maximus motherboard series. Among them an audio solution, the GTX 980 Ti MATRIX (reviewed here) and also part of it is the new ROG 10G Express, an 10 Gb...
ASUS Launches GeForce GTX 980 Ti Poseidon Platinum Graphics Card - 09/02/2015 09:00 AM
Okay so we already reviewed this card last week, today the official announcement. ASUS Republic of Gamers (ROG) today announced Poseidon GTX 980 Ti, a super-cool new graphics card with an exclusive h...
ASUS Launches TUF Sabertooth Z170 Mark 1 Motherboard - 08/28/2015 08:29 AM
ASUS announced TUF Sabertooth Z170 Mark 1 including TUF Thermal Armor and TUF Fortifier technologies, TUF ICe, TUF Thermal Radar 2 and TUF Detective 2 for cooling, strength and easy monitoring and con...
Senior Member
Posts: 447
Joined: 2003-04-23
Agreed... switching from Razor optical mice i used for yrs to a laser mouse (Roccat), much more sensitive and responsive, night and day imo.
Senior Member
Posts: 1786
Joined: 2012-10-07
I actually just ordered a laser mouse (first one for me) as I wanted something a bit larger (fingers starting to get stiff and sore after using small mice over the years) and saw the Func MS-3 Rev.2 for 19€ and couldn't resist.
Is the acceleration really bad? Currently using a wireless Logitech G602, but it is too small for me.
I think the amount of acceleration can vary from sensor to sensor, so you can't say all models of laser mice will have the same acceleration issues. I have a laser mouse, a G9x, and I tried switching to a fairly cheap but well reviewed optical mouse (to supposedly avoid any acceleration) and I found the G9x far more precise and accurate - only a very small amount of acceleration on the G9x and mostly only when moving the mouse extremely fast, I play with quite high sensitivity so don't need to move the mouse at ridiculous speeds. I think the most important thing in a mouse is how comfortable it is to use, tuning the lift off distance with extra mouse feet if necessary, and using a mouse pad which matches well with the sensor & provides the amount of fricition that you find most effective. I'd recommend a hard pad (rather than cloth) for laser mice, Steelseries 4HD pad tracks really accurately with G9x compared to cloth pads for example.