View Full Version : Best gaming mouse pad?
WolfPac_Ite
01-07-2005, 05:59 PM
I am looking for a good gaming uber quality mouse pad, anyone know of any?
Also for anyone who has used one of these; http://www.ratpadz.com/
What did you think of it?
Sorry if this is posted in the wrong forum, it's not a peripherals, and it is hard so....
IronMentality
01-07-2005, 10:50 PM
www.func.net
GraemeM
01-07-2005, 11:52 PM
buy the MX-1000 mouse, you won't need a mouse pad. THe thing is soo smooth
CaptTuna
01-08-2005, 12:01 AM
I wish I thought of $14 mouse pads.
WolfPac_Ite
01-10-2005, 11:53 PM
That makes me wonder, if there would be any difference in using the MX-1000 on a wood surface or actually mouse pad. Maybe one isn't needed.
GraemeM
01-15-2005, 06:24 PM
no difference really. In fact a mouse pad is worse than a good wood surface from what I've seen.
shadowbreaker513
01-15-2005, 06:35 PM
I've got a FlexGlow led mousepad from newegg. Sturdy, and gives me much greater accuracy than normal mouse pads in games. (also my brand new mx1000 don't hurt XD)
Jaggannath
01-25-2005, 07:13 PM
Mousepads are unnecessary.... some mouses have troubles detecting on different surfaces sometimes, if so just slip something underneath it. Problem solved
I have found that a white peice of paper on wood is the best mouse pad for an optical mouse i taped mine down and it works great no lagging or anything and mine is wireless too so that is the cheap way out if you want to try it
RoyalT
01-27-2005, 03:48 AM
I have an all wood desk and I use a mouse pad with my optical mouse, the desk is just too ridged without it. It isn't a gaming mouse pad but it works good for my gaming needs...oh its a simple "fellowes" microban.
WolfPac_Ite
03-04-2005, 10:14 AM
I have found that a white peice of paper on wood is the best mouse pad for an optical mouse i taped mine down and it works great no lagging or anything and mine is wireless too so that is the cheap way out if you want to try it
O_o
Very interesting, i'll have to try that out when I get a wireless mouse.
l4wgu4rd
04-08-2005, 10:06 AM
Pads are realy important. As for me i'm a fan of Steelad. Cool gliding and pretty normal price. They also have new pad - Qck. Huge as texas.
I really like the 3M Precise Mousing Surface--I think they run $10-15. I can't say anything other than it's really, really precise. On the other hand, I've never had a game that required that much precision--when's the last time you cleaned the mouse ball (or maybe I'm just playing different games).
Stryker
04-08-2005, 11:23 AM
Pads are realy important.
Why do you say this? I have never used a mouse pad and I have never had a problem. I don't use a mousepad at work (just the matte finished desk-top) and I do a lot of graphic design, which takes a whole lot more precision than gaming does. I am moving my mouse by the PIXEL and it's flawless without a pad.
james8547
04-08-2005, 11:07 PM
One thing I noticed:
Dust/dirt gets in the optical hole faster when I'm not using a mouse pad. Plus, a black, sticky gunk forms on the bottom of the mouse (probably from eraser residues).
Edit:
As for which mouse pad, I'm more comfortable with regular ones from Staples / Office Depot. I don't have any precision issues with them.
WolfPac_Ite
05-02-2005, 02:13 AM
Wow, didn't know this topic would still get replies. I have tested using my wired mouse on the paper coated wood desk I am using, and it reads fine, but the mouse seems to slip/stick slightly.
KayGee1028
05-04-2005, 01:09 AM
I actually bought an XTract gaming mouse pad since I didn't have one to begin with. I liked it...for about a week. It felt too slippery or it had too much glide. This may be a little too much info but it started to build up patches of skin from where my wrist was frequently moving on the pad. So I went and bought one of those cheap, old, gel-like CompUSA regular mousepad for I think less than $5 and it had just as much accuracy with less "slide".
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