Iâve been using Mionix mice for years now, because being a regular person, and not a pro gamer, I value ergonomics over performance. But what happens when Mionix get around to making a mouse that feels as good as it works?
You get, at least in theory, the Mionix Naos 7000. Which is an awesome gaming mouse.
On the outside, it looks exactly the same as the companyâs last few flagship mice. Even feels (mostly) the same. Indeed, if it wasnât for the removal of DPI LED lights on the side (which I never used on the 8200 anyway), I couldnât tell the difference between the three.
Thereâs the same top-shelf ergonomics, which makes the mouse comfortable to use all day long. Thereâs the same soft-rubber, matte finish which provides fantastic grip and feels expensive. And, best of all, thereâs the same restraint in terms of design, with only a small Mionix logo at the base and a light under the mousewheel breaking from the solid, stealth-black appearance.
A few tweaks have been made in terms of your interaction with the mouse. The mousehweel feels slightly heavier, with a more discernable click to it. Itâs also slightly heavier than its predecessor, the 8200, and while the specs sheet says itâs only by a margin of 4 grams, I noticed it almost immediately (and was thankful for it, since the 8200 always felt a little too light compared to its heavier sibling, the 5000).
For the most part, though, itâs a case of ainât broke, donât fix. People like myself dig the mice for their comfort, practicality and simplicity. Not every gaming mouse needs to be a neon-flashing monstrosity of angles and flourishes.
Where changes have been made is inside the mouse. The 8200, as much as it was fine for me as a regular (if heavy) gamer, was a laser mouse, which those serious about their competitive gaming (first person shooters especially) mightnât have been too happy with.
The 7000 is an optical mouse, which apparently offers smoother movement and improved accuracy at higher speeds, with a maximum DPI of 7000 (hence the name). Iâll be honest â I put the 8200 and 7000 through their paces in Battlefield 4, Portal 2 and some Total War for comparison and my regular human hand/brain just couldnât tell the difference.
If youâre the kind of gamer who can (or thinks they can), then I apologise from the bottom of my heart. This review wonât be for you, sorry. Please direct all complaints to plunkettATkotakuDOTcom.
All I can say is that as a writer and a strategy gamer, I judge a mouse on its feel (for comfort during prolonged gaming) and build quality, and the NAOS 7000 is, like its predecessors were at the time, the best damn gaming mouse Iâve ever used.
If youâre after some specs to look over, here you go, these are pasted straight from Mionix:
PRODUCT SPECIFICATION
32bit ARM processor running at 32Mhz
Right handed truly ergonomic design, full palm grip
Soft touch rubber coating
7 fully programmable buttons
3 step in-game DPI adjustment
2 integrated RGB LEDs in 2 color zones
Up to 16.8 Million LED color options
Lighting effects Color shift, Solid, Blinking, Pulsating and Breathing
128 kb built-in memory
Polling rate adjustable up to 1000Hz
Large PTFE mouse feet
Gold Plated, Full speed USB 2.0 connection with Plug and Play
Cable 2m long braided cable
SENSOR SPECIFICATION
ADNS â 3310 gaming grade IR-LED optical sensor
Up to 7000DPI
MAX tracking speed of at least 5.45m/sec (215 IPS)
No positive or negative hardware acceleration
Adjustable Lift Off Distance
SOFTWARE FEATURES
Up to 5 Profiles saved to the in-built memory
Adjustable X / Y Axis
Adjustable Polling Rate
Live record macro manager
Up to 16.8 million color LED options
Customize RGB manger
Pulsating, Blinking and Breathing LED effects
Color Shift lighting mode
Angle Snapping adjustable in 15 steps
Angle Tuning adjustable from -30 to 30 degrees
LOD Calibration tool
S.Q.A.Tâą â Surface Quality Analyzer Tool
DIMENSIONS & WEIGHT
130.84Ă84.72Ă38.67 mm / 5.15Ă3.33Ă1.52 in
Netto (w/o cable): 103 gr
Netto (cable incl.): 147 gr