Featured

Ozone Neon Precision Laser Gaming Mouse Review

Introduction


Ozone are one of the coolest gaming brands on the market, with a reputation that has proven popular with both the casual gaming market and professional eSports players, often blending high-performance and quality with affordable price tags, a great combination for any gaming peripheral.

The Ozone Neon gaming mouse is packed full of features that should make it a great tool for any gamer, with a max DPI of 6400 and a precision laser sensor, ergonomic ambidextrous design that will suit both left and right-handed players, on the fly DPI toggling, a non-slip rubber coating, programmable buttons and software for recording macros.

We’ve seen a few Ozone products here at eTeknix and to this day we haven’t seen anything that hasn’t impressed us, and today I’m hoping to see the same high level of quality and award-winning performance I have come to expect from the brand. Available at around £45 the mouse isn’t the most high-end product on the market, but its price and specifications put it against some strong competition from the likes of SteelSeries, Zowie and many others.

The packaging is nicely designed with a clear image of the mouse on the front of the box, as well as a quick rundown of some of the major features, these include the 6400 DPI laser sensor, 8 programmable buttons and ambidextrous design.

Around the back of the box you’ll find details of more features, including the DPI toggle, rubber coated surface and an endorsement from professional eSports player Choi “DanDy” In-kyu.

The front of the box folds open to reveal even more details about the mouse, such as how the 8 buttons can be programmed over 5 independent profiles and stored on the 128KB of built-in memory.

In the box you’ll find the mouse, which comes hard-wired with a high quality braided cable, an Ozone vinyl sticker, user manual and mini CD-ROM with all the basic drivers and software on it, of course we’ll be downloading the latest version from the website, but it’s always nice to have drivers included regardless.

Page: 1 2 3 4

Peter Donnell

As a child in my 40's, I spend my day combining my love of music and movies with a life-long passion for gaming, from arcade classics and retro consoles to the latest high-end PC and console games. So it's no wonder I write about tech and test the latest hardware while I enjoy my hobbies!

Disqus Comments Loading...

Recent Posts

TSMC Founder Slams Intel, Claims Company’s Move into Chip Manufacturing Was a Mistake

Morris Chang, founder of chip giant TSMC, has sharply criticized Intel's strategies, suggesting that the…

2 hours ago

Report: Nintendo Switch 2 Might Not Even Reach 1080p with DLSS

Digital Foundry has consistently been one of the most reliable sources discussing the Nintendo Switch…

2 hours ago

KLEVV URBANE V RGB 32GB DDR5 7600 Memory Review

KLEVV is still a relatively new player in the memory market, at least compared to…

3 hours ago

RTX 4090 Prices Skyrocket and Retailers Discontinue Sales Ahead of RTX 5090 Launch

The RTX 4090 graphics card has experienced a significant price increase as the highly anticipated…

21 hours ago

NVIDIA Sued for Abusing Its Monopoly Position in China

NVIDIA holds a dominant position in the graphics card market, with its GeForce RTX series…

21 hours ago

Intel ARC A770 Phantom Gaming OC 16GB GDDR6 PCI-Express Graphics Card

LightingLightingYesLighting ColourRGBColourPrimary ColourBlackSecondary ColourYellow, Grey, Purple, RedDimensionsLength305 mmWidth131 mmHeight56 mmClock SpeedsMax. GPU Clock (Boost)2400 MHzMax.…

23 hours ago