Remember that uninspiring beige mouse that required the ball and rollers to be cleaned every so often? What about the first few generations of wireless mice that chewed through batteries so fast it ...
Not too long after SteelSeries released its original Sensei in 2011, I realized that it was a mouse I could spend the rest of my life with. A bit later, I adopted a [RAW] variant for my second PC.
The Sensei Wireless mouse is one of the most impressive wireless input devices on the market, but it will cost you. The SteelSeries Sensei Wireless Laser Mouse is a gaming mouse for everybody. Or, at ...
Here at CES 2014, we had the opportunity of checking out two of SteelSeries’ latest gaming peripherals – the Stratus Wireless Gaming Controller and the Sensei Wireless Gaming Mouse. The Stratus is ...
The base measures 0.95 by 6.5 by 3.94 inches (HWD), and is nicely sized to sit next to your mouse pad, with a recessed cradle for the mouse. The cradle is ringed with a glowing LED indicator that ...
The SteelSeries Sensei is a high-quality gaming mouse with lots of tweakable options and some very well-thought-out features, but at $90, it’s definitely meant for serious gamers only. What could you ...
Some things go out of style and never come back, like those poofy hairdos from the 1980s. Yet others have a way of circling back, such as vinyl records. SteelSeries hopes its original ambidextrous ...
SteelSeries is bringing back a classic. On the 10th anniversary of the company's popular Sensei mouse, it's releasing the Sensei Ten. The new mouse features the same ambidextrous design as its 2009 ...
As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases. TweakTown may also earn commissions from other affiliate partners at no extra cost to you. Just over two years ago, we were given the ...
Back in 2011, SteelSeries unleashed the original Sensei gaming mouse which at the time was one of the most advanced gaming mice ever produced. Along with the now familiar Sensei gaming mouse design, ...
Remember that uninspiring beige mouse that required the ball and rollers to be cleaned every so often? What about the first few generations of wireless mice that chewed through batteries so fast it ...