Up top, the rubbery mouse wheel has a comfortable rubbery coating and knurling, with scrolling action that has soft detents-it doesn’t audibly “click” as you scroll it, but you can feel the notches just fine. The shape will work in a claw grip for those with large hands, or a palm grip for those with smaller hands. Unlike the G903, which can switch-hit for lefties, the G703 is for right-handed users only. A pair of large thumb buttons with satisfying click action adorn the left side. It has a mid-profile curve that is sloped upwards toward the left, comfortably fitting a right-handed grip. Title=More%20Expert%20Tech%20Roundups&type=articles%2Cvideos&tags=tech-roundup&count=6&columnCount=6&theme=article If you were to say, “generic PC mouse” to a stranger, this is the shape they would imagine. While the G903 takes a kitchen-sink approach to design with an ambidextrous design and all sorts of features, the G703 is rather pedestrian. ![]() If you don’t need the extra features of the G903 (ambidextrous design, customizable side buttons, free-spinning mouse wheel) you might not need to spend the extra money.Ĭompared to the G903, the G703 is a little boring, but it’s comfortable, well-made, and performs just as well, which is what counts the most. But at $100, this isn’t a cheap mouse, either. Logitech’s new G703 (See it on Amazon) / (See it on Amazon UK)is one of its first mice to support the company’s POWERPLAY mouse pad, and is meant to offer a little respite for those who think the $150 G903 is a little too expensive.
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