In the X line, A4 Tech produces entry-level gaming mice for not too demanding gamers with a basic functional set of DPI switches, additional buttons and internal memory. Despite the price tags below $20, in some models you can find intelligent optical sensors, many additional buttons and even additional weights to change the weight of the mouse.

In terms of functionality and positioning, representatives of this series are one step below the game controllers from the A4 Tech Bloody series. While Bloody mice often use optical sensors from PixArt, the X rodents have Agilent sensors with much more modest sensitivity and acceleration. Switches from Omron are much rarer than in Bloody models. And the weight of the body on average in the ward is higher. All this suggests that A4 Tech X mice are sharpened, rather, for high accuracy of movements, and not for speed.


But the buttons in A4 Tech, as always, were not stingy. Using the Oscar proprietary software, you can bind the necessary game actions or macros to each key, which will be recorded in the internal memory and saved if you connect the mouse to another computer or laptop. In the same application, the user can create several work profiles (for example, games, office and multimedia) with different key settings, and then change them on the fly using a separate switch button.