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Introducing the A4Tech X7 - the overwhelming superiority

I don’t want to be overheard, but sometime 5-6 years ago, the first A4Tech X7-labeled mice hit the market. Initially only one type, but barely a year later two varieties were available.
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A4Tech, of course, has been making mice much longer than that, so it wasn’t really surprising that it came out with a mouse for gamers, but that it only came so late. By the time the first X7 debuted, the market was already packed with better-than-better and more expensive mice, all of which carried the gamer token.
In fact, A4Techns didn’t have to think much about what kind of business policy to follow, as it had until then been a specialist in cheap but acceptable quality mice. The first X7 mice also fit into this philosophy. To the best of their knowledge, they remained below the more famous companions, but also in price, and not a little.

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As with normal table mice, there are some players who can't afford tens of thousands of forints per mouse, or if they don't, they wouldn't give it that much because they wouldn't be worth it for an hour of play twice a week.

It was a blessing for them to see the A4Tech X7, and it is a blessing today. The manufacturer is still true to his own principles to this day, but over the years he has fenced off a professional who either had his hands in a normal shape or had little to do with ergonomics as a result of his studies. Because of this, we hear less and less bad things about A4Tech mice, as they are already competing in form with larger, more reputable mouse companies.

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Now is the time to introduce the 750 more X7 models after the recently introduced XL3-BK, which was the entry level for the X7. These pieces marked F2, F5 and F7 are among the more expensive solutions, but of course only among A4Tech products, because we can buy them for buttons anyway.

 
Let's start the presentation with the X7 F2!

About the Author

s3nki

Owner of the HOC.hu website. He is the author of hundreds of articles and thousands of news. In addition to various online interfaces, he has written for Chip Magazine and also for the PC Guru. For a time, he ran his own PC shop, working for years as a store manager, service manager, system administrator in addition to journalism.