Ambidextrous Design, On-the-fly DPI Changing, Good for Large Hands, Price,
No braided cord, No weight management
In the end, I am impressed with the overall features of the Abyssus and ease of use on hands in it's price range. However, aesthetically, I am disappointed with the mouse over a few things. The mouse does not come with weight management unlike it's oppone...
Great for small hands, Great tracking for the price, Well built, Ambidextrous, Flawless tracking on decent mouse pads
Small, Only three buttons, Not the most comfortable design, Not really all that cheap
The Razer Abyssus is an interesting attempt at making a budget gaming mouse with an ambidextrous design. Sensor wise the mouse is very well equipped and the 3500 DPI infrared sensor performs flawlessly on most of the gaming surfaces around except for t...
Abstract: eing its price on the market of about 50€. Although revolutionary in every sense of the word, it’s truly too expensive and that amount of money can be put to much better use by investing in a better mouse and putting it on a more accessible mouse pad, without sacrificing much of the...
Light, Claw style (Ambidextrous), LED on tail is nice (especially for Blue LED setups), Very smooth fluid movements, Works great on all surfaces, Simple design, "On the Fly" adjustments (set it and forget it),
None, gold
Overall, I was really impressed with the Abyssus. Honestly, it was an upgrade from my previous mice. One was the Intellimouse and the other an old Fatality gaming mouse (bought on Best Buy gift cards, so don't shame me). One of the biggest hassles I...
Precise, Teflon Feet, Ergonomic Shape, Wads of High Tech, 3500DPI, 1000Hz Ultra Polling, 1ms Response time, 3.5G sensor, Midrange Price
Some People Like More Than 3 Buttons
We found the Abyssus to be a deadly accurate gaming Mouse and the 3 button design kept us focused on what we were doing in game without having to think about what each of 9 buttons does. Movements were swift, key clicks were fast and required minimal ...
Limited customisation. On-the-fly sensitivity not really useful due to lack of buttons. DPI and polling switches are a pain to access. Only 16 events allowed in macros
It may be a simple mouse, but if you can't afford the higher-end gaming mice, the Abyssus is a plucky little contender....
Abstract: In many ways "gaming mouse" isn't even an overly suitable title, as what works well while gaming is going to work just as well browsing the net or using a graphics design program. If a mouse can excel in the heated, fast paced action of gaming hand movement, then it's going to do pretty well elsewhere, too. It is this fact..