- 3500dpi Razer Precision™ 3.5G infrared sensor
- Ergonomic right-handed design
- 1000Hz Ultrapolling™ / 1ms response
- Five independently programmable Hyperesponse™ buttons
- On-The-Fly Sensitivity™ adjustment
- Always-On™ mode
- Ultra-large non-slip buttons
- 16-bit ultra-wide data path
- 60–120 inches per second and 15g of acceleration
- Zero-acoustic Ultraslick™ Teflon feet
- Gold-plated USB connector
- Seven-Foot, lightweight, braided fiber cable
- Approximate size: 128mm (length) x 70mm (width) x 42.5mm (height)
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System & Hardware Requirements
PC/Mac with USB port
Windows® XP /X64/Vista/Vista64 or Mac OS X (v10.4 and above)
Internet connection (for driver installation)
At least 35MB of hard disk space
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| 1. Dave on 11/15/09 said: |
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Razer just released an upgraded version of the Death Adder which is what you see online. Stores probably don't have this one yet.
Either way this mouse kicks ass. It's a great feel, a good size and it's slick as sh*t when paired up with a Razer mousepad. I love it and anyone else who's ever used it has loved it too. But it's a Razer so you knew all this already.
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| 2. Jake on 11/13/09 said: |
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Awesome mouse! Feels great in your hand for precise use of that next-generation infrared sensor. I recommend a good Razer surface with it too though to make best use of the exclusive teflon feet and sensor.
One more advantage over the noobs :D and even the pros, they can't aim as quick without one of these.
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| 3. Vladimir on 11/12/09 said: |
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I ordered this mouse from razer.eu store 2 weeks ago, due to some problems with the national fee's i was really upset, had to pay another whole mouse of tax and some other silly expenses.
But today finally it came, from the second i opened the package where the razer box was a smile came back to my face. The box is perfect. I got a razer hat as a gift as well, that was a really nice touch.
And from the second i got the mouse out of the box, when i took it in my hand i just thought it just feels right.
thats it, thats the sum of it, it just feels right! :)
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| 4. Abaye on 11/11/09 said: |
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I actually did research for mice because thats where game tournaments are won or lost. I narrowed it down to the deathadder and it hasn't let me down yet! I love the options it gives you & it works great with all of my games & normal use! Maximum flexibility & not pricey!
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| 5. Ricardo on 9/27/09 said: |
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I have a question about this mouse. I saw this mouse in a store and the box said it had 1800 dpi, but here on the site says it has 3500 dpi. I wonder what's wrong with that!
Thks great mouses ! Sorry about my english
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| 6. Davor on 9/26/09 said: |
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BRILIANT MICE!
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This mouse is the best mouse on the market by far! I received it this morning and have been playing Team Fortress 2, CoD4, and Unreal Tournament 3. I immediately felt a difference. It fits snugly in your hand and looks amazing. I'm quite new to PC gaming but I have more than tripled my original frags, in one game I even got called a cheater on CoD4 as I went 76-6 on pipeline with the AK-74u, the tracking is stunning and glides across my Razer Destructor Mouse Mat beautifully without making a sound, Amazing mouse, a must buy for any PC gamer.
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No Competition, sorry. Best mouse period. GL HF :D
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| 9. Zsomby on 9/25/09 said: |
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That coool !! verry danegerus! Best of razer mice ! Free frag on n00bs!!!!
Q: What is Drift Control and how does it affect accuracy?
A: Drift control is a common prediction mechanism in mouse sensors that is designed to assist users in drawing straight lines vertically/horizontally in graphical and work applications. Such sensors predict when a straight line is being drawn and corrects any movement that deviates from that straight line, rather than follow the user’s exact movements. This means a downward swipe of 5 degrees can be corrected into a completely horizontal line, causing a gamer to miss his target.

For absolute freedom of movement, the Razer DeathAdder is engineered with no drift control - giving gamers the ability to translate their exact mouse movements into in game frags without interference from prediction mechanisms that results in accuracy loss.
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