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Corsair introduced their Vengeance series of gaming peripherals just over a year ago, and they have since garnered accolades from critics and consumers alike. In the case of their Vengeance keyboards, Corsair took a fresh approach to the design by using a low-profile aluminum structure for the keyboard along with Cherry MX Red switches and a dedicated button for certain gaming styles. Similarly the mice in the Vengeance series have also been tooled for functionality, as they offer have an optimized profile, customizable buttons and have dedicated buttons for either real-time strategy or first person shooter titles.
The keyboards and mice are broken down into two series, the 60 series which is designed for first person shooters, and the 90 series for RTS games and MMORPGs. Corsair has optimized the different series by including features such as dedicated macro keys, textured FPS movement keys and a sniper button, all of which can prove useful for gamers during actual gameplay.
Like other mechanical keyboards and gaming mice, the Vengeance series doesn’t come cheap. In fact, both the Vengeance keyboards have an MSRP of around $100, while the mice hoover around $60. However the Corsair Vengeance products are not the most expensive on the market in comparison to offerings from other companies such as Cooler Master, Thermaltake, etc.
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Interested in a new gaming mouse though. Do you know if the other mouse buttons on either the M60 or M90 are actually programmable outside and in games? It would be nice if there was supplied software for the mouse to provide additional macro functions outside games (like the macro keys on keyboards). It says RTS and MMOs, would the mouse work in other games (if they could be set up) such as RPGs, FPS games, etc?
How is the supplied software work? Is it good software, easy to use, etc? There doesn't seem to be much info on the software at all. I've read one or two user reviews stating some issues with the software, albeit the software is in beta and apparently some issues with the firmware.
but they look like good pieces of equipment. i really like the looks on them.
I could use more buttons (my mouse has a couple of thumb buttons on each side, but the forward-most button is inconvenient to reach so I don't use it). But the amount of
The only heavy issue I had with this keyboard is that the macro keys didn't work in Linux.
After a few months I figured a fix, ... the code is on https://github.com/jupiter126/Linux_Custom_Control_Device