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The Gaming Mouse: Ozone Neon

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A small, ambidextrous gaming mouse

We haven’t seen a new mouse from Ozone in a little while, but those we’ve seen in the past have been plump, hand-filling beasts. The Neon, then, is a departure, as its slim ambidextrous frame certainly isn’t what you’d call hand-filling. In fact, it’s one of the smallest gaming mice we’ve seen. It’s an interesting tack, which could potentially make the  Neon especially attractive to any gamers with smaller hands, who are often neglected in the gaming mouse world, as well as left- handed folks.

Ozone Neon

 

In terms of shape, the Neon’s sleek, humpback lines bear an alarmingly stark similarity to SteelSeries’ range of ambidextrous mice, most notably the $99.77 Sensei and the $63.19 Kana. This isn’t necessarily bad – those mice have a good shape – but it’s also a style that SteelSeries already does very well, and the Ozone doesn’t appear to iterate on the design.

 

Also, the Neon was marginally less pleasing to use when we tested it side by side with the Kana, primarily due to the difference in size – the Neon just feels a little insubstantial in the hand. This doesn’t mean it’s poorly made or flimsy (it isn’t), but it doesn’t have a comforting size that you’re holding $83.14 worth of gaming peripheral in your hand.

The two primary button have a sastifyingly crunchy action

Functionally, the Neon is certainly competent. The two primary buttons have a satisfyingly crunchy action and the scroll wheel, while a little on the small side, has firmly defined stages to its roll; we didn’t over or under roll when switching between weapons in our games testing.

As an ambidextrous mouse, the Neon also boasts a pair of buttons on either side of its body, and these are positioned well. We didn’t find ourselves clicking the buttons on the far side of the mouse with our ring finer or little finger by mistake.

It has on-the-fly resolution switching too – as you’d expect – and the Neon also has the benefit of a 6,400dpi laser sensor over the Kana’s optical sensor. However, dpi settings above 4,000dpi require high levels of small movement control on the user’s part, rendering them largely useless for the majority of gamers – only snipers with ridiculously sized mouse pads could possibly benefit.

Ozone Neon

There’s a downloadable software suite too, which is well designed, if unremarkable. Sadly, though, there’s little more to say about the Neon, which is frustrating given its $83.14 price tag. It all smacks of a lack of ambition, which is disappointing from a company we know can do better.

Conclusion

The Ozone Neon is a solid, well-built ambidextrous mouse, with decent buttons. However, it lacks the satisfying size in your hand that you’d expect from a $83.14 mouse, and its basic physical design doesn’t offer anything new or unique over established ambidextrous mice, such as the SteelSeries Kana. If you have smaller than average hands, and find other ambidextrous mice too big, then the Neon is a good gaming mouse, but its small size will limit its appeal for anyone else. If you’re in the market for an ambidextrous mouse, and you aren’t bothered about the size, the SteelSeries Kana is cheaper, better looking and just as good for most gamers.

 

Specifications:

·         Connection: Wired, USB

·         Cable: Braided

·         Material: Plastic

·         Extras: None

 

 

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