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 Location:  Home:: Addons/Accessories :: Basic Mice :: Razer Lachesis 4000 dpi Laser Gaming Mous--Banshee Blue  

Razer Lachesis 4000 dpi Laser Gaming Mous--Banshee Blue

Razer Lachesis 4000 dpi Laser Gaming Mous--Banshee Blue

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Brand: Razer
Category: CE

List Price: $79.99
Buy New: $59.99
You Save: $20.00 (25%)

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New (21) Used (1) from $59.99

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 39 reviews
Sales Rank: 813

Platform: Playstation2
Media: Electronics
Autographed: No
Memorabilia: No
Batteries Included: No
Operating System: Playstation 2
Shipping Weight (lbs): 4.5
Dimensions (in): 5 x 2.8 x 1.5
nv:Device Type: Gaming Mouse
Connection Type: USB
Hand Orientation: Ambidextrous
Tracking Method: Laser
Scrolling Capability: Yes

MPN: RZ01-00170100
Model: RZ01-00170100
UPC: 879862000219
EAN: 0879862000219
ASIN: B000WU35JQ

Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Features:
  • 4000dpi Razer Precision 3G Laser sensor
  • Up to 100 Inches-per-Second tracking speed
  • Nine independently programmable Hyperesponse buttons
  • 32KB Razer Synapse onboard memory
  • On-the-Fly Sensitivity adjustment

Similar Items:

  • Razer Exactmat with Exactrest Gaming Mouse Pad & Wrist Rest--Black
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  • Razer Destructor Professional Gaming Mat
  • Belkin n52te Tournament Edition SpeedPad

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Equipped with the revolutionary 4000dpi Razer Precision 3G Laser sensor, the Razer Lachesis gaming mouse takes on the same lethal traits as its namesake that will send shivers down your enemies' spines. Add 32KB of onboard memory, nine programmable Hyperesponse buttons, as well as an impressive 1000Hz Ultrapolling with 1ms response time, and you've got a formidable weapon in your arsenal of destruction. Victory beckons - move in for the kill.


Customer Reviews:   Read 34 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Razer Lachesis   December 31, 2008
Travis Pitts (Dallas TX)
The razer lachesis is pleasant a reprieve from the last razer product I purchased (lycosa keyboard). The people on here either bought too nice of a mouse, or don't know how to read the manual. I am a high end gamer, that plays games at very high resolutions and am very satisfied with my purchase. This mouse is perfect if you have the right surface to use it on. You want a hard surface, preferably a razer mousepad. I have the razer exactmat and I love this mouse. If you have that, this mouse performs beautifully. The only thing that i could see causing a problem is the fact that the mouse is a little big for some people's hands. The mouse definetly takes some getting used to, but once you calibrate it right, and can fully utilize it, it is amazing. It is by far the best mouse i have ever owned. If you aren't an idiot and can calibrate the mouse right and accept the learning curve of how to use it, this is the mouse for you.

Pros:
Excellent smoothness in mouse strokes
Lighting on it is second to none
Many programmable buttons
on the fly sensitivity
Very precise

Cons:
Too sensitive if you don't have the sense to calibrate it
Price is very expensive

Don't believe all the morons that have reviewed this mouse, look at the review of the razer lycosa that I tore up, and believe me when i say this is a fine piece of equipment. I'm not just a razer "groupie"



1 out of 5 stars An expensive paperweight for 64-bit Vista users   December 25, 2008
R. Jenkins (Vienna, VA United States)
I'm no stranger to PCs, and the Razor Lachesis is bar non the worst mouse (and most expensive) I've ever purchased. It was extremely jittery on the screen on my Vista 64-bit computer, so much so that it was unusable, even at the lowest sensitivity settings. It was therefore passed to a Windows XP 32-bit computer, where it was a little jumpy, but serviceable. The recent Lachesis firmware update, v1.91, was supposed to address and correct this. Wrong. The v1.91 completely killed the mouse. Nothing worked, not on the 64-bit or 32-bit systems. I ended up downloading and installing the v1.64 firmware upgrade, and got the mouse back to where it would work on 32-bit XP, but still not on 64-bit Vista. Not worth the money in my opinion on a 32-bit system, and might not work at all on a 64-bit Vista system. Save your pennies for something else.


4 out of 5 stars Excellent espectations,... but bad luck!!!   December 8, 2008
Victor Espinoza (Caracas, VENEZUELA)
I bought this mouse, because a friend told me it was the best... But i had bad luck, the wheel light doesn't works!! I contacted Razer Service customer, and they sent me some possible solutions , but anyone worked. So, as i live outside US, i had to keep my "half Charged" item... otherwise i had to return it,.. and pay extra charges for shipment... not at all...

Besides that, the mouse is awesome, even i have no tried it on a professional gaming pad yet!



1 out of 5 stars Razer Lachesis horrible for hardcore first person shooters   December 2, 2008
micsun
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Here is my mini review of high end mice I've tried recently.

Razer Lachesis 4000 dpi Laser Gaming Mous--Banshee Blue (4000 DPI, 9 buttons): This is the first mouse that gave me actual pain my my fingers and palm after just a couple of hours use and it has just about the worst ergonomics of any mouse I've ever used. The side buttons are in a very inconvinient location. In first person shooters you'll constantly be accidentally clicking either side's buttons since they're in the area where you grip the mouse (they're designed so you need to put "extra" pressure in the grip to click them). The laser itself is pretty decent at 4000 DPI, but it is placed in the middle of the mouse instead of closer to the front, so you basically need to move the whole mouse to aim instead of the regular first person shooter "tilting the front of the mouse" aiming. Be sure to go to their web site and use the updated drivers and firmware or you'll see a lot of "mouse jumping" problems even when you're not touching the mouse. Also I noticed the mouse buttons would register as "up" as I was turning sometimes with the mouse button down (such as a Heavy in TF2 spinning his gun using the side button, which is annoying as heck). There is also no on-mouse DPI display so there's no way to know which DPI setting you're at (one of the five DPI settings you're forced into). Anyone had any good experience with this mouse?

Logitech G9 Laser Mouse (3200 DPI, 7 buttons, weights, two grip types): I used this mouse for a bit less than a year and it is by far my favorite mouse. One problem is the connector between the mouse and cord eventually went bad and then the mouse had connection issues (Google this for more information). Other than that, it has by far the best tracking and button location of any mouse I've used. I like that the DPI switching is under the left mouse button and it is easy to tell what DPI level I currently am at. Highly recommended!

Logitech 931375-0403 G7 Laser Cordless Mouse Black (2000 DPI), Logitech NEW G5 Laser Mouse (2000 DPI) and Logitech MX518 Gaming Optical Mouse - Metal (1800 DPI): If you can't afford the G9, the models to the left are similarly good. I've used and like them, but they all had tracking accuracy loss over time and needed to be replaced (generally after about 6 to 8 months of every day gaming 4+ hours a day). None of the older models have the high 3200 DPI laser, but the G5/G7 have switchable DPI levels and generally feel good and are ergonomically nice for using over long periods of time.

OCZ OCZMSDMXD Dominatrix Laser Gaming Mouse/MSI GS-501/Cyber Snipa Stinger (3200 DPI, 7 buttons, weights): Very good for the price (one of the cheapest high end gaming grade mice). The button locations are good and so is the feel of the mouse. The default drivers that come with the mouse don't work with games well. You'll have to download the newer ones from their web site and do some special settings for your games to register the side buttons as MOUSE4 and MOUSE5. Highly recommended (drivers could use some work though).

Ideazon Reaper Edge Gaming Mouse - 3200 DPI (3200 DPI, 6 buttons): It's a decent mouse except for the side buttons. The bottom side button is under a nub that is a bit annoying to reach in the middle of a first person shooter fight. The top side button is a little nicer to reach and decent to use for knocking zombies off yourself in L4D. The wheel is annoying since sometimes as you scroll it seems to click without putting much pressure on it (which is annoying if you have something bound to MOUSE3 and you just wanted to scroll the mouse wheel). Also, it would have been nice to have two DPI buttons instead of the one (easier to "go to sniper mode"/"go to regular mode"). Currently the DPI button toggles between 5 different DPI levels one at a time and there isn't a way just to use less than that (I'd prefer just two for the above scenario...). I wouldn't recommend this mouse in it's current form.

As with any mousing, be sure to have a good quality mouse pad that doesn't need to be replaced (I used to replace those 3M Precise mouse pads about every month heh). I've been using a fUnc sUrface 1030, but there are a lot of newer ones out there now. Just be sure it's something you can soap wash and you should be good to go (no foamy or cloth pads).



5 out of 5 stars Mouse for Macbook   November 11, 2008
B.H.L.W. (Laramie, Wyoming United States)
I got this mouse for use with my macbook. I can say it feels very nice, works very well on games, and I have no complaints about the product at all.

It fits my hand just fine, doesn't seem to small or too big, and works on most any surface.


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