The primary left and right-click buttons have that legendary DeathAdder deep curvature that keeps your fingers locked in a position where they need to be, and that’s one of those defining features that make the DeathAdder or what it is.
That’s what makes it so unique and extraordinary, and we need those buttons we have razors optical Mel switches that use ultra-fast and ultra-responsive infrared light beams to register clicks.
Group between the two left, and right-click buttons a nice wide and grip textured scroll wheel, and it does produce some tactile feedback when you roll it if you press down on it.
It also works as a button, and just behind that, there are two more programmable buttons right on the top of the mouse.
The left side features two massive thumb buttons. This is my favourite part of this entire mouse; that probably sounds weird because every gaming mouse has some side buttons these days, but I think Razer nailed the size and positioning of these two buttons.
They are the easiest to press and the most comfortable that I’ve used on any gaming mouse ever. Both sides include a rubberized grip textured surface, but it doesn’t feel quite.
Underneath, there’s two large 100 percent PTFE feat and the razor focus plus 20,000 DPI optical gaming sensor, which by the way, is over ten times the resolution of the original Razer DeathAdder.