When comparing Redragon Perdition vs Kensington Expert Mouse, the Slant community recommends Redragon Perdition for most people. In the question“What is the best gaming mouse?” Redragon Perdition is ranked 43rd while Kensington Expert Mouse is ranked 55th. The most important reason people chose Redragon Perdition is:
The mouse wheel has a nice tire-like grip easy for scrolling through inventories or the internet.
Specs
Ranked in these QuestionsQuestion Ranking
Pros
Pro Mouse wheel
The mouse wheel has a nice tire-like grip easy for scrolling through inventories or the internet.
Pro LEDs
For those with personalities, there is three spots of LEDs on the mouse the mouse wheel sides (which are strictly the colors of the different DPI settings), the Redragon Logo on the Palm area, and the 12 number buttons. The Logo and the 12 buttons can be programmed to change to countless different shades of colors. The LEDs can be set to a breathe function which I think is pretty cool to see in a dark room.
Pro Hardware macro storage
You can plug this mouse to a different pc without losing keybindings and macros.
Pro Lots of buttons
Great for MMORPG's, daily macros and professional software.
Pro Nice Surface
The surface of the Redragon Perdition has a nice grip-like texture that I find myself just plain rubbing at times. After 5+ hours of continuous gameplay, I don't find my hands slipping due to hand sweat getting on the mouse.
Pro Programmable Left-Left click button
Out of the box it starts out as a rapid-fire button, but can be programmed to anything.
Pro Comfortable and ergonomic
With thumb and pinky on the buttons and three fingers controlling the ball, the user's wrist lays flat on the table (or on the provided attachable wrist rest).
Pro Intuitive link between ball motion and FPS camera angle
The ball is large enough for turning it to feel like physically rotating an object.
Cons
Con Not suitable for FPS games
Lots of buttons = lots of missclicks
Con Not a mouse
This is a trackball, not a mouse.
Con Questionable secondary button defaults
The upper left button, which is the hardest to use, is middle click by default. The upper right, which the ring finger naturally rests near, defaults to Back. This can be particularly annoying as the Back button is easy to brush when moving hands between keyboard and mouse.