Razer’s new flagship mouse, the Viper V3 Pro, has arrived

--

The slightly lighter product inherited the form of the Viper V3 HyperSpeed, so it is longer, narrower and slightly higher than the V2 Pro.

Razer has once again updated its range of popular Viper mice, as it launched the next representative of the series, the wireless Viper V3 Pro, which is currently the top sensor in the house, scaling up to 35,000 cpi and 750 ips/70 gs Focus Pro 35K (probably a PixArt PAW 3950 version with resolution control in 1 cpi steps).

[+]

The symmetrical periphery has lost 3 grams compared to its predecessor, so it now weighs 55 grams without holes, but its physical dimensions have also changed slightly, as the previous length of 126.5 mm has increased to 127.1 mm, the 66.2 mm width decreased to 63.9 mm, while the 37.8 mm height increased to 39.9 mm. The manufacturer’s third-generation optical switches promising “90 million” clicks are located under the main clicks of the six-button device, so this has not changed since the V2 Pro, as has the omission of RGB lights or the use of the 2.4 GHz HyperSpeed ​​radio.

[+]

The polling rate is capped at 8kHz, of course, and the battery can last up to 95 hours with reserves, although this is by definition for the 1000Hz setting; The maximum is 62 hours at 2000 Hz, 40 at 4000 Hz, and 17 hours at 8000 Hz. You can of course use the USB Type-C/Type-A paracable provided for charging, and the possibility of automatically varying the USB update rate helps to save energy.


[+]


[+]


[+]

Made of 85 percent recycled plastics, the rodent has a status indicator LED above its roller with textured rubber, while virgin grade PTFE pads with rounded edges on its belly are stationed in the company of a sensor ring that reduces cpi deviation. The device, which can be added to the basket in both black and white for 180 euros, has environmentally friendly packaging and comes with a grip tape set as an extra.

The article is in Hungarian

Tags: Razers flagship mouse Viper Pro arrived

-

NEXT Galaxies may have evolved much faster at the dawn of the universe