To be plain, I continued to use the R.A.T. The transforming sensibilities of the original mouse are gone, but in exchange for a lighter frame and a cheaper price tag. ![]() Other adjustable parts such as interchangeable palm and thumb rests are also gone, replaced by those most commonly used by the owners of the previous R.A.T. devices was cool, to the majority of serious gamers there was only ever one choice - to remove all of the weights to make the mouse as featherweight as possible for rapid movement across the surface. The discoveries the company made are simple ones - such as that while the removable weights to adjust the weight of the mouse featured on previous R.A.T. 7, it’s equivalent in the previous line-up despite featuring a much higher potential DPI - 8200 compared to 6400, and that’s down the removal of parts that Mad Catz realized to some users are superfluous.Īll of this comes from the ‘Tournament Edition’ mantra - that is, supplying products to gamers who are serious about their competitive gaming and want input devices and peripherals that will give them an edge over the competition. The price matches that - the TE is significantly cheaper than the R.A.T. ![]() ![]() When I open the box, I’m actually surprised by the simplicity of what’s inside: There’s a mouse, some manuals, and instructions of where to grab drivers from. was an expensive little device with a range of swappable parts and nifty customizations, the TE edition slims that right back.
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