PCPOWERPLAY

Roccat Kain 202 Aimo

Wireless wonder.

- PRICE $109 http://roccat.org

Oh, to be a fly on the wall in the meeting room where this mouse was first pitched. What does a mouse do—some disruptive but well-liked marketing wunderkind asks—if not just point and click? What if we just focused really hard on that part? What if – at this point, the marketing guy sweeps his hands around dramatical­ly – we created the perfect click?

This scenario is, of course, fantastica­l. But the Roccat website claims that the Kain did take two years of brainstorm­ing, redesigns, and rigorous testing, and then goes on to refer to it as “our masterpiec­e.” Well, Roccat, we’ll be the judge of that.

The Kain 202 AIMO, itself a minor evolution of the Kain 200, is the physical embodiment of this reviewer’s favorite Ron Swanson quote: “Never half-ass two things. Whole-ass one thing.” The Kain 202 isn’t complicate­d, and it doesn’t present itself as such. This isn’t a mouse for people who like lots of buttons, flashy RGB lighting, or unbelievab­ly high DPIs. It does one thing perfectly: clicking stuff.

The Roccat Owl-Eye sensor was designed in collaborat­ion with PixArt, so the general sensitivit­y is great. The DPI clocks in at 16,000, exactly what you’d expect from a high-quality gaming mouse, as is the 1,000Hz polling rate. But the true worth of the Kain 202 isn’t measurable in simple statistics, you see. It’s more of a sensation; using the Kain simply feels good.

The exterior coating is comfortabl­e, with a white matte finish that is dirt-resistant and feels comfortabl­e under the palm, even after extended use. There’s no thumb rest, but that’s hardly a huge problem. The surface material is grippy, ensuring that it stays firmly under your hand, even during the sweatiest online matches, and the whole unit feels robust. We didn’t throw ours at a wall in a fit of gamer rage, but we reckon that if we did, the 202 could shrug it off.

Of course, the buttons are what really matter here. Roccat wasn’t messing around when it came up with the “Titan Click” split button design used by the Kain series, where low-tolerance springs and optimized switch positionin­g make for a clicking function that is responsive and sturdy, rated by the manufactur­er for 50 million clicks. The Kain’s firmware also claims to process clicks up to 16ms faster than other gaming mice, and in practice, it feels latency-free— impressive, given its wireless design.

Our favorite part, though, is the scroll wheel. Again, there are no bells and whistles here; no adjustable scroll speed or wheel lock, just a rubbertopp­ed wheel that rotates and clicks with satisfying weight. The same can’t quite be said of the two side-mounted buttons, which are fine, but lack the heft of the other buttons. That’s it, though: This mouse doesn’t have lots of programmab­le buttons, so if you’re a strategy or MMORPG gamer, you may want to look elsewhere. CHRISTIAN GUYTON

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