Cooler Master MM711 White 60G RGB Gaming Mouse with Lightweight Honeycomb Shell, Ultralight Ultraweave Cable, Pixart 3389 16000 DPI Optical Sensor
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MJ England Jr
> 3 dayTo start, this is an awesome product overall. My only complaint can easily be remedied if you are willing to put in a little bit of effort. The rgb and button programming is simple and easy to use, the weight is light and feels pretty balanced. Personal favorite and I cant imagine much that would make me want to switch.... ...Except maybe this one thing: the glossy finish makes it difficult to hold and control at times, especially if your hands get sweaty while playing. I wish I could have gotten a matte one, but none were available anywhere I looked. I fixed this by cutting and applying some tape for better grip. It worked pretty well. What I liked: Super lightweight, one of the lightest mice you can buy, even with the rgb. I picked this model because the rgb looks better on camera. It is easily programmable and saves into the mouse memory so you dont need an app running or installed on every computer you use it with. It feels like it could still use some improving, but I could also just not know how to customize it correctly. Cable is also super lightweight and feels almost effortless to move. The mouse overall, especially for me moving from a G502 Hero, feels almost weightless when you hold it for the first time. And this feeling doesnt really go away much once you et used to it. If you like ultra light mice. This could be for you.
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Sean Coughlin
> 3 dayIts crazy that you can get a mouse this light for this cheap. Unlike some others, I have not experienced any creaking on the mouse body. This is great for competitive FPS gaming. The shape of the mouse is simply ergonomic, not forcing your hand into one shape, but letting you grip the mouse how it best suits you. Even though I have fairly large hands, I can still easily claw grip this mouse because of the shape. The quality of the materials here is what youd expect. The cheap plastic doesnt have a great feel to it on its own, but some grip tape fixed the problem very quickly. Overall, this a great gaming mouse for someone that wants a competitive edge in the games they play.
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Seth
> 3 dayI was really really happy with this mouse when I got it. It was very very comfortable, and just felt pretty nice. I didnt actually end up downloading the software until a few days before I got fed up with its borked state. The software didnt seem bad. The way it broke for me was itd just lose connection to my computer, make it spaz out in whatever game I was playing at the time, make the sensitivity go bonkers and then go back to normal. Maybe I was abusive to it? Im not sure, but while I had it, it was a really nice mouse. Hopefully this was just an issue for me and not any others buying this mouse. Id say read some more reviews, see if anyone else is having this issue. If there are more like mine, Id avoid it and find another if you want a mouse that will last more than a year.
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A Max
> 3 dayI expected a light mouse and a heavy cable but even the cable it light! I have sweaty hands especially when playing fast paced games so this helps get air to my hands.
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Betsy
01-12-2024Excelente mouse, solo que pedi el glossy y me enviaron el matte, ojo ahí.
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ragingJman
Greater than one weekI’m not a super computer knowledgeable person but I like how it feels and until I understand how to mess with the settings the mouse it’ll be better. But if you got small hands this is for you.
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J. Lee
> 3 dayThe updated MM710 is almost perfect. The Good - The updated version includes tapered teflon pads for a smooth experience right out of the box. The cord is nice and loose with good paracord as before, I do wish that it didnt come so bunched up but if you carefully massage out the kinks you will not have longevity issues with the cord. Mouse is a good shape for small hand palm grippers, but also good for larger hands that want to use claw or fingertip grip, particularly if you like resting a part of your hand on the mouse. I am personally a palm grip user, so this type of form factor is much more comfortable than the Razer or lightweight Logitech mice that did not allow for easy palm grip. This mouse is super light, your aim will suffer for a while as you get used to it, I would flick too far. However, after getting used to it, high speed movements are effortless. This is probably one of the lightest mice available out of the box aside from the Finalmouse Ultralight, which is almost always sold out, and is 2.5x the price. It appears that build quality by and large has been improved to a significant degree, the updated version (at least mine anyway) does not have the general rattling/creaking body and wheels that the prior versions had. The button wobble also seems to have been eliminated. The clicks of the individual buttons feel crisp and good in the hand. I wont even really talk about the sensor, as most gaming mice now have such good sensors that they are accurate beyond the realm of human detection. The Bad - The post-travel is still truly awful. If you palm grip like I do, then your fingers will be pressing on the mouse towards the front end, and you dont even need to press all that hard to have that terrible post travel. The button creaks and then travels down further, even causing it to fake click again due to the levering of the mouse button downwards at the tip, while raising the back end up the mouse button. Its terribly distracting, and makes it sometimes impossible to rapidly click in high-intensity situations. There are many solutions out there. I simply put in some cut up zip ties with double sided tape, bending the zip ties a little to contour to the shape of the mouse buttons. It seems thats all thats necessary now that they appeared to have fixed most of the button wobble and wheel rattling. However, the fact that I have to do that when it could have been fixed from the factory so very easily with a little lip of extra plastic at the tip is disappointing. As a minor issue, the mouse body does flex somewhat when you squeeze it with significant pressure that I would not expect most people to actually do in real life use. When Im holding the mouse up in both of my hands and I squeeze the side, I can cause the forward and backward mouse buttons to click without physically touching the buttons. However, I found this very, very difficult to do when I use the mouse normally. Considering how light this mouse is, some structural strength is expected to be lost, but it is not noticeable in normal use. The software for the mouse still needs a few more features in my opinion, but all the important features are there, such as lift off distance, angle tuning, surface tuning, disabling DPI steps. I wish that the software had a DPI Shift feature like the Logitech Gaming Software does where it only changes the DPI as long as the button is being held down. Another weird software quirk I see is that when you press the DPI button, it doesnt change DPI right away, sometimes I have to stop the mouse for a second to let it think and then it goes back. Its super weird and not very responsive. Overall minor complaint. Coolermaster still appears to be updating the software, so well see what kind of features they might add. TL;DR - Mouse is almost perfect, good for smaller hands and most grips, likely lightest mouse available at this time. Button-post travel is still terrible, but easily fixed. Minor mouse body flex, not noticeable in normal use. Software still needs more development, but it appears CoolerMaster is working on it.
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ME K.
> 3 dayWorks great for daily and gaming.
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Jesse
30-11-2024I accidentally bought this mouse along with the G-Wolves Skoll mouse, forgetting to remove the later from my cart, so I decided to try them both out and compare the two. After seeing the great reviews of the Skoll from mouse enthusiasts and the very extra packaging and steel box, I fully expected my gaming performance to be much better on the Skoll, compared to the very simplistic MM710. The Skoll has an weird design that slightly raises your trigger finger, its got RGB lighting, and it is much bigger than the MM710. I suppose its all personal preference, but after a full day of gaming with both of these mice, I found the MM710 to be much more accurate easier and smoother to use. It felt much more responsive and quicker than the larger Skoll mouse, which could be due to either its size or its better sensor or its lighter weight or all of the above. In summary, dont judge a book by its cover. Many reviews you see will say that it has all sorts of quality control issues; wobbly buttons etc. but these were apparently all solved when they changed their machinery to make the mice. My mouse has absolutely no defects and works flawlessly and I love it. This is the first product I have ever bought that is so good that I actually wrote a review for it. Buy this mouse.
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JM
> 3 dayThis is general build quality of the mouse and addressing some reviews i found on YT on this mouse. ~ I do not have a rattle in my version of the mouse like some YT review videos show. ~ I can click the side button if i press into the side shell extremely hard, this has not happened in game. ~ I do not have any extreme wobble in the front left an right buttons, this appears to have been fixed by CM compared to earlier models. ~ The mouse cord feels and looks like a shoe lace, extremely light weight. ~ Download the software from CMs website so that you can get the firmware update and change the settings of the mouse. This is about the CMs Mouse Software used to configure the mouse. ~ You can change the mouse pull rate in the CM software between 125Hz, 250Hz, 500Hz and 1000Hz (default). ~ You can disable DPI profiles by clicking the purple box next to the profile to uncheck the profile from being active. ~ Button response time can not go under 4ms, this isnt the best but I dont notice it in-game compared to my G Pro. ~ The DPI range is from 200 up to 32,000 and the steps are 100 DPI. The PixArt PMW3389 sensor should be able to do 50 DPI steps but this is not currently built into the CM software so you can only do steps of 100 DPI, you will not be able to set something like 450 DPI currently. ~ You can set up to 5 different profiles in the software for different games or different users on the same computer instead of using the DPI toggle switch. ~ You can disconnect the X-Axis and Y-Axis and set them to different DPI levels by clicking the chin symbol between the two settings. This is probably only useful to anyone playing 4:3 stretched so that they can lower the X-Axis to actually match the Y-Axis in-game. I own several gaming mice that are on the smaller side. Logitech G Pro (wired), Logitech G303 (discontinued) and BenQ Zowie S2 and now I also own the CoolerMaster MM710 to add to my collection and I will use two of those mouse to compare the size and shape of the CM MM710 for anyone that happens to have used or own either the G Pro (wired), G305 (wireless version of the G Pro wired) or the BenQ Zowie S2. Shape wise in my opinion the CM MM710 sits right in-between the G Pro (wired) and the Zowie S2. See the attached photos for a visual reference. From Left to Right in the photos G Pro (wired), CM MM710, BenQ Zowie S2. ~ The width of the MM710 is a hair wider than the G Pro (wired) and slightly narrower than the Zowie S2. ~ The height of the MM710 is a hair taller than the G Pro (wired) and slightly shorter than the Zowie S2. ~ The length of the MM710 is basically the same as the G Pro (wired) and shorter than the Zowie S2. ~ With a little cable, the weight wise my CM MM710 comes in at 55.6g, my BenQ Zowie s2 is 84.1g and my Logitech G Pro (wired) is 85.0g Personally, I like the shape of the CM MM710 much better than the BenQ Zowie S2 and the G Pro. It fits my hybrid grip perfectly and it only took a couple of games to adjust to the weight being lighter at the same sensitivity i normally play on. The CM MM710 has become my main mouse over the G Pro (wired).