Is there any real difference between gaming mouses and regular mouses?

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thecasualnoob

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#1 thecasualnoob
Member since 2008 • 58 Posts
or mice?
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hongkingkong

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#2 hongkingkong
Member since 2006 • 9368 Posts
Nothing other than gaming mice are designed a with gamers in mind who click a lot for a long amount of time. Also gaming mice tend to have quicker response times.
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death1505921

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#3 death1505921
Member since 2004 • 5260 Posts

Nothing other than gaming mice are designed a with gamers in mind who click a lot for a long amount of time. Also gaming mice tend to have quicker response times.hongkingkong

They have ALOT more DPI (Accuracy)

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Thinker_145

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#4 Thinker_145
Member since 2007 • 2546 Posts

Gaming mouses have dpi settings which really is quite useful.They also have thumb buttons which although by no means necessary can come handy if you use them properly like in doom 3 having the torch with a mouse thumb button is fantastic.

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codezer0

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#5 codezer0
Member since 2004 • 15898 Posts
"Gaming" mice are usually (key word there) built with a better pcb design inside and more optimized electronics. Some are able to scale to a much higher refresh rate than what PS/2 or USB would have to offer, and thus use internal interpolation to be able to simulate the higher dpi ranges that they talk about (which is really weird, because the dpi doesn't mean a whole lot without knowing how big each 'dot' is, if they're supposed to be in a straight line or a square inch or something...). Newer ones on the market even feature a way to dynamically adjust the dpi level on the mouse itself, which is pretty neat.
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RayvinAzn

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#6 RayvinAzn
Member since 2004 • 12552 Posts

Just from a common sense standpoint:

A good mouse will usually last 4 years or more, and cost between $30-$80. That's around $15 per year on average, for something you're constantly using on your computer (unless you're a programmer).

A graphics card that you spend $300+ on will usually only last for two years before it's out of date, and it will only be used while gaming. That's around $150 per year.

A good mouse is a solid investment, and one well worth your money. It doesn't have to be a gaming mouse, just something that tracks well, fits your hand comfortably, and is generally nice to use.