The OG glass pad is actually the SteelSeries IceMat that came out almost 20 years ago. I used one for years and loved it. The disadvantage is that if any small bit of hard dust gets between the mouse feet and the glass, it feels really bad until you clean the mouse and the glass pad thoroughly.
I'm still running my IceMat this day! You'd have to rip it from my cold, dead mouse before I'd give it up... I really love how precise it is for work (graphics & animation) too! :D
I had the compad Speedpad which had a bit more texture (basically a hybrid) to counterweigh this, CS 1.3 days lost it unfortunately, must have happen on some Lan
I have a modern day Razer glass pad, and even though I love it, I do agree with that awful feeling. I find it is easy to quickly clean by simply wiping my hand across the pad a few times, but if some dust settles and gets caught under the mouse, look out. It feels like grinding a rock pebble against the glass, it's terrible.
change your mentality and the way you treat playing the game. you will start to rank up. hold yourself accountable for your rank or gameplay, not the products you by
To me, the idea of "registering every small movement" is closer to "registering every small imperfection/jitter" I think it's a really cool idea and it might suit some people, but sensitivity in 3D games is not just software settings. The friction between the mouse and arm against the mousepad is important and it's all part in how the aiming feels. The more of that friction you take away, the more of the stability you take away from it and thus, every little thing will ultimately affect your in-game aim. I think there's definitely a sweet spot with friction and if you have too much you lose control, if you have too little, you lose stability. I think this kind of mousepad would definitely not be a positive for me, but then again I've spent years playing mostly FPS games on a cloth pad and I'm used with the feel of it. My muscle memory has developed side by side with friction, so it's all just natural to me. I don't think that trade-off is worth it to get less friction. Who's to say some people that have gotten used to glass pads will be the same or better, though ?
I made the drastic switch from a 5 year old QCK to a Pulsar superglide, the first month or so was really difficult to get used to but after that I just felt like I was playing the same but without the downsides of a cloth pad.
I mean just look at what he said 6:45, "If you've ever wondered what glass on glass feels like (glass sliders on a glass mouse pad), it's basically like your mouse is on an air-hockey table: there is no feedback underneath the mousepad." He notes that there is "no feedback" to the hand, or in other words, no friction, yet he then seconds later says "so yeah probably don't do this", implying that too little friction is bad. What I'm trying to get at is that he has drawn a line between too much and too little friction, but I'm on your side in that I don't entirely know that it's in the right place. The same thing also applies to his mouse itself, and how light it is, and the bad ergonomics are. In the end, this whole problem can be simplified to training your brain to know how much force to apply to your mouse to move it a certain amount of pixels, and whether you have 0 friction or tons of friction, as long as your mouse pad friction, mouse sliders friction, and mouse mass are consistent, your brain can learn the force to pixels ratio at any point. Then we look to see what's easier to be consistent with, and though this is an unproven belief, I believe that your body naturally has better control over larger forces than the tiny ones required to move his nearly frictionless and massless mouse.
I'm not sure if you're mentioning all of this from the perspective of swapping from cloth to glass or just in general, but if it's the latter I don't agree with calling it "imperfections" because I find that to be fundamentally biased to say if that makes sense? They're not necessarily imperfections, it's just with the guaranteed minimum friction there is using a cloth pad and standard mouse, the minimum threshold of force to move the mouse will naturally be a set value higher than on a glass pad, meaning that until you use enough force to reach the threshold, there will be no noticable movements of the cursor/crosshair. With a glasspad this threshold is lowered and therefore the amount of force we might passively apply to our mouse will be noticed because previously the friction that increased the threshold would prevent our passive or minor force to engage the cursor whereas now it would. For someone who starts with a glasspad this would be a nonissue as they would be equally clueless on how to comfortably maneuver a mouse anyways, right? It's just about being used to it. If you just meant everything just from the perspective of swapping over from cloth to glass, I can moreso understand where you're coming from though I still don't think they're imperfections so to speak.
Nope. This isnt an issue about friction, but about sensitivity in general. It's the exact same as high vs low sens; where low sens gives you far more control, but loses speed. While high sens gives speed but loses control. With this, your effective sens is actually affected by your 1) mousepad 2) dpi 3) in game sens 4) any imperfection on your mousepad (grime, sweat, oil). The whole "imperfections showing because its more accurate" bit is literally just the same as a higher sens. So play around with sensitivity, it will fix the issues. My opinion is that a smoother mousepad combined with far lower sens (like super duper low) and far higher dpi is the way to go.
I got Razer's glass mouse pad (the "Atlas") a couple months ago, and it is the best gaming peripheral upgrade I've made in... maybe ever. I think the implementation of different glass mats may give a very different experience, but the Razer mat totally works for me. It is so smooth and consistent (totally agree with the video, way better than using glass skates), basically infinitely durable (some of my cloth mouse pads were ruined almost instantly by a cat claw puncture), and impossibly easy to clean with a simple wipe (again the cat, hair is a problem). I find I can easily adjust how fast it is by how much of my hand I let spill over the mouse and touch the pad. I do use a sleeve from the wrist up, but I don't find that it's a problem to have some of my palm touching the glass. I tend to actually prefer it, it slows movement down enough to give control comparable to a cloth mat, and gives me tactile feedback that I find comforting. My hands generally don't get sweaty, so it's still plenty fast, just not as slippery. In a situation where I need to make bigger and faster movements, I can just lift my hand up a bit to reduce the amount of contact with the pad, and movement is blazing fast. And again I can't emphasize enough how much better it is versus glass skates on the mouse, a totally different (and much better) experience.
@@griefwnl7641 hope you like it! 11 months later I stand by it. I tried switching back to cloth for a bit, and hated it. Still feel strongly that glass is superior.
Holy shit like I can see you are working out in your videos (big biceps, traps, and chest) but I didn't expect you to be a fellow powerlifter! with a decent 500+ deadlift too
Glass Mousepads he used (4:06): *Cerapad KIN* - Highest friction, most stopping power *Pulsar Superglide Pad* - In the middle, some stopping power, but still extremely smooth *Skypad 3.0 XL* - Lowest friction, least stopping power
I'm a bit late to this, just found your channel tonight and have been binging through a lot of your old vids, but the discussion about the sleeve REALLY spoke to me. I'm also a powerlifter and I think that comparison is perfect. I started playing with a sleeve about a month ago and it's seriously made a massive difference for me. My room in my house doesn't have any airflow due to it being part of an original bigger room that was later made into 2, it's on the side of the house that gets sunlight all day, and most of my gaming comes between 2-8PM. All these factors basically make my room feel like a sauna while I'm playing and I'm already someone who sweats more than the average person. The struggles on playing and constantly sticking to my mouse pad and frequently having my inputs messed up because of that were beyond irritating. For me specifically with all that context, putting a sleeve on seriously may have been a bigger buff to my gameplay than going from 60hz to 244hz, it was that extreme. Obviously this is probably a more extreme case, but for anyone who has regular issues or even just annoyance with sweaty wrists or arms, I think trying out playing with a sleeve is someone you should heavily consider. Having the friction between your arm and mousepad always be constant is big and consistency is something we look for in other areas. I mean imagine playing with your chair 6 inches higher or lower or playing a foot further back from your desk. Maybe you think you'll feel cringe doing it, but that feeling will go away quickly if you feel improvements. I felt the same about knee sleeves in powerlifting until I tried them and started loving them. Really love that you spoke about sleeves and I related big time since my gaming experience has gotten so much better recently since I started using one.
If that's not his GF/wife's hair dryer I'm disappointed. I use a $15 Conair I bought at the drug store 7 years ago in university and that works perfectly fine.
@@jwlaffertyI mean, yeah, it works perfectly fine. I could say the same thing about getting 30 fps and using a membrane keyboard for gaming. It works fine. But it isn't as enjoyable or good as it could be, is it? Nicer hair dryers do make a difference and let you dry your hair much faster.
@@Lethal_Bite I have trouble believing there are significant differences between hair dryers. And I spare no expense on important things. Currently running a 4090/7800X3D rig. 4X 3090 and 2X 3080 last gen (plus other cards, mining), new Land Rover Defender, etc. But a man should not be spending hundreds of dollars on a hair dryer.
2 months till the ULX will be shipped out, i wanna see how a 200€ mouse from a company that prides itself with its mice stacks up vs a youtube boyos 3d printed fun project.
@@SedatedSloth if you include shipping and import taxes its closer to 230€ for europeans till shops like maxgaming get batches sent out like with the last batch. also waiting 2 months and playing the first batch lotto on such an expensive mouse is bonkers and i understand why people would spring for a lamzu atlantis for 100€ and just have it instead of dealing with final support and waiting longer when the QC is bad again. its all just preference and willingness to deal with bullshit really.
@@breakies They now have duty paid shipping for £15 via Fedex so you shouldn't pay any additional import duty or costs. I agree it's preference and the mice are pretty different shapes too, but personally I've never had any issues with finalmouse but could just be luck of the draw.
I got myself a Superglide pad after watching this video, and suprisingly my experience is a bit different to Ali's. I immediately feel that I can track better and flick more accurately in games like Apex because of the low static friction. Also, the high friction between skin and glass pads cause little to no issue to me. Since I am using wrist aiming, playing without a sleeve is doable as most of the time there is no need to move my arm across the pad.
Now everybody just needs to take the time to get good on a low DPI like 600, and use over 100cm/360 so they can actually hit shots and stop worrying about copying some esports player
@@TheACTIONZ Well I personally still prefer Fast MousePads like the Artisan Shidenkai instead of the GlassPads. I personally think you still need a bit of control that is just not existing in the GlassPads. Played multiple Shooters competitively and tried out many different pads.
2 extremes in the complete opposite direction. Day and night guy should be his name. Literally doing the heaviest strength sport and then go out of your way to do the lightest possible way to play another sport :D
Being someone who lifts and cares about his physique, I knew this guy had big ass forearm but man 4 plate squat and 5 plate deadlift, that was something quite unexpected. I mean you don’t imagine Austin Evans or Jayztwocent or Linus repping over 400 lbs on Squat and Deadlift right?
For tournament players always bring a soft pad to place under the hard pad. Helps with leveling out tables/desk setups where there can be inconsistency. Shout out to OGs users that remember the icemat days.
I think the problem people have with glass mouse pad being "unstable" is due to the sensitivity they are using. I play on really low sens (61 cm/360), so the matter of small movements isn't an obstacle, but improved with a faster surface.
Squat is at least 160 (not including bar so more than that. Deadlift hard to say cuz theres little plates on the end but the normal plates are 20kg 5 on each side so very munimum 200kg (without bar) which is absolutely nuts
Thank you for the very interesting video. Top marks as always, sir! What's also interesting is why you chose to wear such a relaxed fit shirt and deprived your viewers of appreciating those Optimum Biceps. ;)
What I really like about you man! Just a cool, fit dude who plays and is good at games. A really good example for a lot of younger people. Videogames are nice, but go to the gym aswell! I am a fit and healty old 30 year old guy, who loves videogames aswell. So it's good that you show how important it is to be healty aswell! Your video editing is next level aswell
Received my glass superglide pad after watching this video, I've been loving it. I use no gloves seems fine for me, also required almost no adjustment.
I am sure I remember you trying the Skypad before and not being a fan, so it is kind of cool to see you revisit glass pads and stick to it for 30 days. I've got the Skypad 3.0 and Cerapad Kin, haven't tried the Pulsar yet because I'd heard if you have Skypad it's not hugely different; but kind of intrigued by it now. I think for me personally I found that my micro corrections when using say flatline/R301 long range on Apex were much better (I tend not to jitter aim because it just feels like it's going to mess my wrist up and I'd like to be able to play FPS for a long time to come) but I also found that my close range click timing (PK/Wingmang) was off but that is probably just my mouse control. One thing I did really like about glass pads is how unique/fun they feel to use. So many cloth pads these days just feel the same or are ever so slightly different. I think glass really challenges your aim too.
I have used a glass mouspad for over two years know (Sykpad), and to answer your question how people can use it without a sleeve. I have really dry skin, when I game my hands/arms are getting colder, so little to no sweat for me, so I can't really stick to it. Alltough after a really hot today I stick to the pad yes, but fixable with a cool room. Furthermore, pre prepared to buy new mouse skates, the glass doesn't wear down, but your PTFE Saktes will, after a really long time after use you should definitely change your skates. You can really feel your mouse getting slower and slower and lossing the speed of the pad if you're skates have worn out. Something you didn't say in your Vid. I would recommend the pad ecspecially for people that have trouble with aim tracking like me, combined with a light mouse it helped me get better tracking compared to my old cloth pad. I agree to the rest of the Video completely, ecspecially getting used to it. As you said Dust can be a problem, if something like a hair gets stuck under your mouse you instantly feel it and breaks you outta game, so you can clean your Mouse skates or Pad. Great Videos keep posting :D
def recommend from my experience and imo. me going from heavy mouse 108g or so with any hard mat, I aimed way better then now with a 60g mouse and a cloth mat. I couldn't put my finger on it until a bit later on why my aim got worse.
you're dead on. i play with a g502 on a textured metal corsair mouse mat. the heavier weight negates the micro jitters, while the low friction makes bigger movements so, so precise.
I've been using a shin sleeve on my forearm for the longest time when playing games and even for regular computer use. It protects my skin from friction against the table and mousepad, and it's pretty easy to put on and off.
I think the issue is most of us here have probably been using cloth pads for almost 20 years (or more) I wonder if say in another 20 years the kids of today would have the same issues mentioned if they grow up using a glass pad
so after all, will you stick with the glass pad? Are you actually better on it? (or predict to be better after like another 30 days of practice?) Would you say superglide pad is noticably more stable than skypad 3? I have the skypad 3 and I might consider the superglide one.
Out of curiosity, have you done an incline test for friction? It might be able to give more consistant values to compare, although the blow test was pretty cool. Basically, set the mouse on the pad and raise the mousepad from one of its edges. Have a level (some phones have a tool built in) and see at what degree does the mouse start to move. This only measures static friction between mouse and pad. Friction scales linearly so the weight of the mouse has no effect. The kinetic friction is always lower than the static friction so it gives you a general idea on that too.
I switched to the Skypad 3.0 last week and it was one of the best upgrades I've ever done, I'm upset I was so late to it. Compared to my old cloth mouse pad the glide is soooo smooth making my tracking and flicks 100x better. For a fast sens wrist player like me, this was perfect. I'll NEVER EVERRRR go back to any other mouse pad
I feel like there's an area that would be a sweet spot where you have low enough friction to not restrict input, but enough friction to help you *stop* moving. Physical mouse smoothing of a sort, where the tiniest inconsentencies get smoothed out. It makes sense that jitter would show up when friction gets low enough and I think the best solution is just... enough friction.
I've had the skypad for like 2 years and still cant find anything to gain a little friction. need grippier harder feet maybe, or a heavier mouse who knows
I think glass pads are a cool idea, and I sure some truly talented and practiced aimers can pull it off, but I think the slight amount of friction gained from a cloth pad give you better control and consistency in game. I also wonder if over time your mouse feet will become more worn down with a glass pad, but it seems that you didn't deal with that after 30 days so maybe its a non issue. Really appreciate your thorough review of these products because its really mirrors what my thought process and methodology would be if I were to buy something like this! :^)
I remember in the early 2000s a lot of my friends who I played Cs:source with played on a glass mouse pad, I always wondered why people stopped. Definitely considering trying one out, but I had no idea that they were so expensive!
skypad the OG? now listen here son. Let me tell you the story of the icemat. It came out in 2001 and was for a while the preferred pad for FPS gaming. Together with teflon pads for your mouse it was unparalleled. I do not know why people stoped using it but i can assure you that skypad is not the OG. Not even by a long shot.
My biggest love for them is a spray of dirty cheap windex and a microfiber and it feels like day one. No more random slow spots over time or worn out dirty cloth pads.
I've been using a Skypad 3.0 since May of 2022. You really don't need a sleeve, but keeping the room cool or having a fan blow directly on you helps. Baseline skin friction isn't noticeable. Sweat is.
I swapped from softpad to hardpad and had a similar experience. I used it for 1 year and swapped back because I didn't feel comfortable with the sensitivity, it hurt my wrist and I had less place to move as there are no desk-wide hardpads. You can have the exact same settings on a mouse, as soon as you swap your surface, your sensitivity can change drastically.
Thanks for this detailed video of your experience with glass mousepads, mate. This got me really curious as I've been a cloth mousepad user my entire life, and wanted to try a glass mousepad for something different. I purchased and have been using the L sized Pulsar Super Glide mousepad and Pulsar arm sleeve for 2 weeks now with a Logitech G Pro X Superlight. Early thoughts are that it definitely takes a little getting used to, especially if you're coming from a cloth pad with more control. Regularly cleaning dust from the mousepad is a must, otherwise it feels like sand gritting under the mouse and it's just awful. This was really annoying at first, but I'm kind of used to it now. I've experienced 2 spin outs from my mouse sensor, but thankfully in the Apex firing range and not a live game. Still, something to be wary of, at least with the G Pro Superlight. Maybe it had some light dust on it that I didn't realize, and I should quickly clean it with a microfiber cloth before every use. I use 800 dpi 1.8 sensitivity for Apex and 5 in Overwatch. Using this mousepad when it's clean does feel pretty nice for tracking. While it seems okay for tactical shooters like Valorant and CSGO, it's probably not ideal due to lower stopping power, and I would agree players focused on tactical shooters should get a cloth mousepad with more control. I could be wrong, but I don't think a single CSGO or Valorant pro uses a glass pad, and probably for good reason. I know of a few in Apex (i.e. Zer0), but that could just be a Skypad sponsorship thing idk. The idea of never having to buy another mousepad again as long as I clean and look after this Pulsar Super glide is somewhat appealing, but I'm not sure if this is for me long term yet, as I have mixed use cases and don't just play track heavy FPS games like Apex. I'll stick with it for at least 3 months as I'm not underperforming in games, and definitely need more time to get used to it. Give it a go if you've got the money to spare and want to try something different/fun, but don't' expect it to improve your game at all, especially not in the first several weeks.
hey man I've found this comment super interesting as someone whose considering upgrading my mouse & pad setup as I get more into aim training and shooters like Apex on PC, (was a console player until a year or so ago and haven't gotten into the competitive side of games on pc till now). As this comment was several months ago now, I'd love to hear if you're still using the superglide and what progress you've made with it, both from a performance improvement and end user experience perspective.
Nice Video! By the way regarding the compression sleeves, I intuitively used one of my painting gloves for graphic tablets and it actually made a difference while playing, which was pretty cool :D
Would be cool if you could give some updates on the Mouse Wear on these Pads aka how often you would have to replace the Skates compared to using them on a Cloth. Keep it up
Hey @OptimumTech. I am happy to see you have added a scroll wheel to your custom mouse! I would be very interested in buying one as I am a light mouse glass pad enthusiast. Please keep us posted on the production of the mouse and where to buy one.
3:15 also keeps your hands warmer! and as anyone with cold hands can confirm with me, theres no harder nerf to your skill than your frigid ice witch hands unable to stay warm lol
Mother of father, the moment I saw that sleeve, I swear I lost my sh*t. I have extremely sweaty hands and I have decorated towel on my desk to keep it clean 😁 I tried some metallic pad from Razer some time ago, but overall it wasn’t a good experience. A couple years ago I saw something like that sleeve in an advertisement in the internet, but after searching I have found nothing related to what I was looking for. Part of this problem is because I live in Central Europe and it’s hard to find specific products like this. Thank you so much for both sleeve idea and glass mousepad 🙏 P.S. And don’t listen to all those chubby cheeks talking sh*t about “using sleeve for gaming”. I am the type of gamer who’s having fun in multiplayer games (Apex) when my team is doing well. And I am always the first one to show teammates that I am taking it serious. So if there is some thing that can have positive impact on my way to Preds, why not use it?! As you said, equipment is vital in any sport. And competitive games are sport.
Dope. Now all I need is a glass mousepad + special video gaming fingerless gloves to go with the free mouse that was packed into the prebuilt I bought 15 years ago, and I'll finally be ready to take on ranked.
In the end it's all about physics. The coefficient of static friction should be as close as possible to the kinetic coefficient of friction, like in human joints for example. That way you don't have this breaking loose effect to throw you off. I personally use the glorious ice pad with ceramic skates
5 or so years ago I cut a large sheet of aluminum to size, rounded the edges and painted it. Best mouse pad I have ever used. It’s super easy to repair when paint wares out.
So as a glass mousepad user, if you are experienced and feel like you are hitting a ceiling go ahead and get one, but it should not be your first mousepad. Having the cloth smooths out some of your inconsistency’s of aiming such as being jittery. After you get good with cloth pad Glass will help you build off of the basic skills and force you to master the fine details in your aim, it won’t come instantly and it takes time and practice to master but after you do you feel like can hit anything.
From my experience cordura pads have similar levels of friction and are more consistent in temperature changes. Glass also reveals if you have any sort of crumbs on your pad which is annoying
Wow blast from the past! We used glass with teflon under the mats in the past. I think Steelseries were really popular with a "Steelmat" series. I think it was in the early 2000s :D
I've been playing with a 100 gram sensei and a razer goliathus control for over 10 years and now coming back to the market is just insane. I feel like in a year people will move just their hand over a air hockey table and say "too heavy, too much stopping force"
I've been playing with rubberised fingerless (just the tips) gloves and a neoprene compression fitting for padding my wrist for years. Bonus is no RSI because that's what an RSI wrist strap does. - also helps to keep my fingers warmer in colder months so they don't get stiff after long sessions either. With rubberised gloves (basic fabric work gloves with the palms and fingers rubberised) using a Hotas style joystick there's also much less need to grip hard to maintain hand placement. Win all round.
I used to have a Steelseries hard pad for multiple years about 15 years ago. Abrasion has occurred over time in the areas where I moved the mouse frequently. It was more difficult to move the mouse in those areas. It felt slower. Imagine sliding on an ice sidewalk it's gonna be super smooth. Now try to do the same thing after Sidewalk Salt has been applied. You can still slide but it's gonna be much harder. I hope it makes sense. Another issue was the desk surface. It was okay on my computer desk but when I went to a LAN with my friends then it was a different story. I had to use a cloth pad to create a smooth surface and then I put the hard pad on the top. So I was using two mouse pads at the same time. Another thing was the friction. It wasn't super loud but it was noticeable.
5:09 that ignores the main reason most people switch to glass mouse pads, their cloth pads get worn out or dirty and they want something that lasts longer and is easier to clean
Optimum tech, you inadvertently created a new benchmark. A real world power to weight ratio. Total Deadlift weight divided by 454 (round up or down to one pound in grahams), multiplied by the total mouse weight. Assuming you can dead lift 500 lbs and the mouse weighs 32g. sum=(500 / 454) * 32 == 35.24 The higher the better (the less the amount of effort needed to physically move the mouse(theoretically)). So, someone like me who can't dead lift much would have a score of maybe (250 / 454) * 32 == 17.62. This brings physical fitness into the picture as who cares how light a mouse is if the user can barely lift a pencil? I'm half joking.
I HAVE MAINED GLASS PADS FOREVER. I love the glass pads for sniping because you use your fingers and hands to get an amazing feel for small adjustments. but close quarters are rough because your hand sweats and sticks. The sleeve helps with removing this aspect from your arm but it still exists in other parts of your hand. another reason glass pads aren't good is the oils in your hand is constantly changing the slide on the glass. I recently made the switch to pads and am having greater success in close quarter battles.
"I thought the sleeve might be too much" says bro as he's holding a battery attached to a scroll wheel and 2 switches instead of a mouse 💀
hi
@@bajnokwatta hi!
definitely what i was thinking lol
@@puffii_hi
The OG glass pad is actually the SteelSeries IceMat that came out almost 20 years ago. I used one for years and loved it. The disadvantage is that if any small bit of hard dust gets between the mouse feet and the glass, it feels really bad until you clean the mouse and the glass pad thoroughly.
I'm still running my IceMat this day! You'd have to rip it from my cold, dead mouse before I'd give it up... I really love how precise it is for work (graphics & animation) too! :D
I had the compad Speedpad which had a bit more texture (basically a hybrid) to counterweigh this, CS 1.3 days
lost it unfortunately, must have happen on some Lan
I have a modern day Razer glass pad, and even though I love it, I do agree with that awful feeling. I find it is easy to quickly clean by simply wiping my hand across the pad a few times, but if some dust settles and gets caught under the mouse, look out. It feels like grinding a rock pebble against the glass, it's terrible.
@@torontowill ahaha I can feel that. yea sometimes I think you need like 2 desks, 1 for gaming in a vacuum dude
Everyone had to get a glass mouse pad back then. I bet that thing still sits in a closet somewhere.
I can’t wait to try all these products just to still be silver
Imagine you rank down 😂
🤣
change your mentality and the way you treat playing the game. you will start to rank up. hold yourself accountable for your rank or gameplay, not the products you by
Emotional damage
@@KillerInstinct1someone took the joke to serious
To me, the idea of "registering every small movement" is closer to "registering every small imperfection/jitter"
I think it's a really cool idea and it might suit some people, but sensitivity in 3D games is not just software settings.
The friction between the mouse and arm against the mousepad is important and it's all part in how the aiming feels.
The more of that friction you take away, the more of the stability you take away from it and thus, every little thing will ultimately affect your in-game aim.
I think there's definitely a sweet spot with friction and if you have too much you lose control, if you have too little, you lose stability.
I think this kind of mousepad would definitely not be a positive for me, but then again I've spent years playing mostly FPS games on a cloth pad and I'm used with the feel of it. My muscle memory has developed side by side with friction, so it's all just natural to me. I don't think that trade-off is worth it to get less friction.
Who's to say some people that have gotten used to glass pads will be the same or better, though ?
PERFECTLY worded.
I made the drastic switch from a 5 year old QCK to a Pulsar superglide, the first month or so was really difficult to get used to but after that I just felt like I was playing the same but without the downsides of a cloth pad.
I mean just look at what he said 6:45, "If you've ever wondered what glass on glass feels like (glass sliders on a glass mouse pad), it's basically like your mouse is on an air-hockey table: there is no feedback underneath the mousepad." He notes that there is "no feedback" to the hand, or in other words, no friction, yet he then seconds later says "so yeah probably don't do this", implying that too little friction is bad. What I'm trying to get at is that he has drawn a line between too much and too little friction, but I'm on your side in that I don't entirely know that it's in the right place. The same thing also applies to his mouse itself, and how light it is, and the bad ergonomics are.
In the end, this whole problem can be simplified to training your brain to know how much force to apply to your mouse to move it a certain amount of pixels, and whether you have 0 friction or tons of friction, as long as your mouse pad friction, mouse sliders friction, and mouse mass are consistent, your brain can learn the force to pixels ratio at any point. Then we look to see what's easier to be consistent with, and though this is an unproven belief, I believe that your body naturally has better control over larger forces than the tiny ones required to move his nearly frictionless and massless mouse.
I'm not sure if you're mentioning all of this from the perspective of swapping from cloth to glass or just in general, but if it's the latter I don't agree with calling it "imperfections" because I find that to be fundamentally biased to say if that makes sense? They're not necessarily imperfections, it's just with the guaranteed minimum friction there is using a cloth pad and standard mouse, the minimum threshold of force to move the mouse will naturally be a set value higher than on a glass pad, meaning that until you use enough force to reach the threshold, there will be no noticable movements of the cursor/crosshair.
With a glasspad this threshold is lowered and therefore the amount of force we might passively apply to our mouse will be noticed because previously the friction that increased the threshold would prevent our passive or minor force to engage the cursor whereas now it would. For someone who starts with a glasspad this would be a nonissue as they would be equally clueless on how to comfortably maneuver a mouse anyways, right? It's just about being used to it. If you just meant everything just from the perspective of swapping over from cloth to glass, I can moreso understand where you're coming from though I still don't think they're imperfections so to speak.
Nope. This isnt an issue about friction, but about sensitivity in general. It's the exact same as high vs low sens; where low sens gives you far more control, but loses speed. While high sens gives speed but loses control. With this, your effective sens is actually affected by your 1) mousepad 2) dpi 3) in game sens 4) any imperfection on your mousepad (grime, sweat, oil). The whole "imperfections showing because its more accurate" bit is literally just the same as a higher sens. So play around with sensitivity, it will fix the issues.
My opinion is that a smoother mousepad combined with far lower sens (like super duper low) and far higher dpi is the way to go.
Sometimes I forget how buff this man is
would bang
@@BOZ_11 Bro?
@@TacticalKR3W Don't worry, I'll put in a good word
@@TacticalKR3W did he stutter?
sometimes I forget how inbred many youtube viewers are... but then I see comments
I got Razer's glass mouse pad (the "Atlas") a couple months ago, and it is the best gaming peripheral upgrade I've made in... maybe ever. I think the implementation of different glass mats may give a very different experience, but the Razer mat totally works for me.
It is so smooth and consistent (totally agree with the video, way better than using glass skates), basically infinitely durable (some of my cloth mouse pads were ruined almost instantly by a cat claw puncture), and impossibly easy to clean with a simple wipe (again the cat, hair is a problem). I find I can easily adjust how fast it is by how much of my hand I let spill over the mouse and touch the pad. I do use a sleeve from the wrist up, but I don't find that it's a problem to have some of my palm touching the glass. I tend to actually prefer it, it slows movement down enough to give control comparable to a cloth mat, and gives me tactile feedback that I find comforting. My hands generally don't get sweaty, so it's still plenty fast, just not as slippery. In a situation where I need to make bigger and faster movements, I can just lift my hand up a bit to reduce the amount of contact with the pad, and movement is blazing fast. And again I can't emphasize enough how much better it is versus glass skates on the mouse, a totally different (and much better) experience.
I’m going to try it out because of this comment.
@@griefwnl7641 hope you like it! 11 months later I stand by it. I tried switching back to cloth for a bit, and hated it. Still feel strongly that glass is superior.
Subtile flex with the Deadlift and Squats weight 😂 Got to love Optimum for that
Imagine he had worn the gaming sleeves while doing it, +20kg instant!
@@samserious1337 Would have doubled his precision when lowering the weight😂
He's squatting 180 kilos. He should be flexing hard
bro repping >230kg
Wish he had a lifting channel!
Holy shit like I can see you are working out in your videos (big biceps, traps, and chest) but I didn't expect you to be a fellow powerlifter! with a decent 500+ deadlift too
Glass Mousepads he used (4:06):
*Cerapad KIN* - Highest friction, most stopping power
*Pulsar Superglide Pad* - In the middle, some stopping power, but still extremely smooth
*Skypad 3.0 XL* - Lowest friction, least stopping power
Thx
thanks
He went over this
@@Swixtee its for people who don't remember and need a quick reminder and don't wanna have to scrub through the video time and time again :)
we love u
I'm a bit late to this, just found your channel tonight and have been binging through a lot of your old vids, but the discussion about the sleeve REALLY spoke to me.
I'm also a powerlifter and I think that comparison is perfect. I started playing with a sleeve about a month ago and it's seriously made a massive difference for me. My room in my house doesn't have any airflow due to it being part of an original bigger room that was later made into 2, it's on the side of the house that gets sunlight all day, and most of my gaming comes between 2-8PM. All these factors basically make my room feel like a sauna while I'm playing and I'm already someone who sweats more than the average person. The struggles on playing and constantly sticking to my mouse pad and frequently having my inputs messed up because of that were beyond irritating.
For me specifically with all that context, putting a sleeve on seriously may have been a bigger buff to my gameplay than going from 60hz to 244hz, it was that extreme. Obviously this is probably a more extreme case, but for anyone who has regular issues or even just annoyance with sweaty wrists or arms, I think trying out playing with a sleeve is someone you should heavily consider. Having the friction between your arm and mousepad always be constant is big and consistency is something we look for in other areas. I mean imagine playing with your chair 6 inches higher or lower or playing a foot further back from your desk. Maybe you think you'll feel cringe doing it, but that feeling will go away quickly if you feel improvements. I felt the same about knee sleeves in powerlifting until I tried them and started loving them.
Really love that you spoke about sleeves and I related big time since my gaming experience has gotten so much better recently since I started using one.
'I used to do power lifting' no wonder Ali is so buff
This is how you compete!
Would have been neat to see a before and after comparison with an aim program: cloth vs. glass pads
Even this dude’s hair dryer is aesthetically pleasing
If that's not his GF/wife's hair dryer I'm disappointed. I use a $15 Conair I bought at the drug store 7 years ago in university and that works perfectly fine.
@@jwlaffertyI mean, yeah, it works perfectly fine. I could say the same thing about getting 30 fps and using a membrane keyboard for gaming. It works fine. But it isn't as enjoyable or good as it could be, is it?
Nicer hair dryers do make a difference and let you dry your hair much faster.
@@jwlaffertythat shit is gonna light on fire any day now
@@Lethal_Bite I have trouble believing there are significant differences between hair dryers. And I spare no expense on important things. Currently running a 4090/7800X3D rig. 4X 3090 and 2X 3080 last gen (plus other cards, mining), new Land Rover Defender, etc. But a man should not be spending hundreds of dollars on a hair dryer.
@@xKILLRL the last one survived several years before that until I dropped it in water or on the floor too many times. Go blue $15 Conair hairdryer!
That arm sleeve would remove one issue. Dirt on mousepad from skin grease. No more constant spots where tracking is weaker than other spots.
Definitely earned the like for those lifts alone! 220kg deadlift is impressive! 💪
Looks like 235
Just casually squatting 180kg and deadlifting 230kg to show wrist sleeve might be useful when gaming 😂 Dude you're a beast!
Im hyped for the ultralight mouse to be available. Being able to get something so light hopefully without shelling out absurd prices will be nice.
2 months till the ULX will be shipped out, i wanna see how a 200€ mouse from a company that prides itself with its mice stacks up vs a youtube boyos 3d printed fun project.
I just hope there will be an affordable option to just buy the 3d files instead :(
@@SedatedSloth if you include shipping and import taxes its closer to 230€ for europeans till shops like maxgaming get batches sent out like with the last batch. also waiting 2 months and playing the first batch lotto on such an expensive mouse is bonkers and i understand why people would spring for a lamzu atlantis for 100€ and just have it instead of dealing with final support and waiting longer when the QC is bad again. its all just preference and willingness to deal with bullshit really.
@@breakies They now have duty paid shipping for £15 via Fedex so you shouldn't pay any additional import duty or costs. I agree it's preference and the mice are pretty different shapes too, but personally I've never had any issues with finalmouse but could just be luck of the draw.
@@Inconsistense oh thats actually freakin dope. im more than happy with my lamzu, but honestly this makes me consider an ULX in a future batch maybe.
I got myself a Superglide pad after watching this video, and suprisingly my experience is a bit different to Ali's. I immediately feel that I can track better and flick more accurately in games like Apex because of the low static friction. Also, the high friction between skin and glass pads cause little to no issue to me. Since I am using wrist aiming, playing without a sleeve is doable as most of the time there is no need to move my arm across the pad.
How is the durability? Does it still feel the same as when you first got it? Mine is getting delivered today
@@T94869 I’ve been using it on and off during this time. It still feels the same as day1.
I like that optimum is actually taking the time to try out niche products like this
Now everybody just needs to take the time to get good on a low DPI like 600, and use over 100cm/360 so they can actually hit shots and stop worrying about copying some esports player
why? it's pure marketing, the products are crap and not needed, thanks but no thanks.
@@Danuxsyhave you tried one? Lmao, it's perfect for tracking games like apex
@@TheACTIONZ Well I personally still prefer Fast MousePads like the Artisan Shidenkai instead of the GlassPads. I personally think you still need a bit of control that is just not existing in the GlassPads. Played multiple Shooters competitively and tried out many different pads.
@@DvisN you can definitely get good with a glass mousepad like some creators, but it does need a lot of determination
2 extremes in the complete opposite direction. Day and night guy should be his name.
Literally doing the heaviest strength sport and then go out of your way to do the lightest possible way to play another sport :D
Most cracked gamer techtuber award goes to Optimum Tech 😂
2:43 "are you insane?" says the guy who made his own world's lightest mouse.
Bro you have actually become my new favourite tech channel. Thank you for making such high quality vids
I'm telling you man. I legit jumped to my bed to watch the video. Everyone else I watch on my monitor
Fr this guy is an absolute chad
Best gamer tech channel on TH-cam. Great vid as always mate.
Being someone who lifts and cares about his physique, I knew this guy had big ass forearm but man 4 plate squat and 5 plate deadlift, that was something quite unexpected. I mean you don’t imagine Austin Evans or Jayztwocent or Linus repping over 400 lbs on Squat and Deadlift right?
and have really good fps aim as well.
Jay is quite big now tho
Too right, could always tell he was jacked but those were some impressive lifts.
And after that amazing lifts, he got time to do high quality and entertraining tech videos! Truly insane imo
He has no child so he has time for that
Awrsome vid! The razer atlas is also inbetween the super and the skypad friction wise, i found that to be my favourite pad :D
2:50 is the lore to why he is so jacked
For tournament players always bring a soft pad to place under the hard pad. Helps with leveling out tables/desk setups where there can be inconsistency. Shout out to OGs users that remember the icemat days.
I think one big benefit of glass is the longevity, with cloth pads youll get some dust and crumbs in it with time
Just wash it
@@lain2236addestroys the fabric
On the flip side the hard surface mouse pads scrape the pads on the bottom of the mouse. Maybe not so much the glass ones though .
@@diligaf1000 Glass ones scrape even more
@@aqyx my 120x magnifying glass says otherwise
I think the problem people have with glass mouse pad being "unstable" is due to the sensitivity they are using. I play on really low sens (61 cm/360), so the matter of small movements isn't an obstacle, but improved with a faster surface.
61cm sounds like work 😅
I'm on 32cm...
But another issue with that is having to move your mouse 3ft across the room just to do a 180 turn
Squat is at least 160 (not including bar so more than that. Deadlift hard to say cuz theres little plates on the end but the normal plates are 20kg 5 on each side so very munimum 200kg (without bar) which is absolutely nuts
@@sexhaver_420 rough estimates
You're forgetting the weight of the bar, which adds at least another 20kg (44lbs).
180 with 20kg bar no?
and 220?
Are you sure? It looked like 4 and 5 plates respectively, with an additional 15-30 lbs on the deadlift. So squatting 405, deadlift of 510 or 525.
Thank you for the very interesting video. Top marks as always, sir! What's also interesting is why you chose to wear such a relaxed fit shirt and deprived your viewers of appreciating those Optimum Biceps. ;)
I didn't realize your mouse was headed to production, cool as hell
it's probably just a shell. if it's under 20$ it's gonna be a massive success
What I really like about you man! Just a cool, fit dude who plays and is good at games. A really good example for a lot of younger people. Videogames are nice, but go to the gym aswell!
I am a fit and healty old 30 year old guy, who loves videogames aswell. So it's good that you show how important it is to be healty aswell! Your video editing is next level aswell
I love quality of these videos, the effort that go's into these videos is like no one else. Keep it up man👍
800k subs already. That was fast. Congrats.
Are we seeing the beggining of optimum lift? 3:06 great form btw
I've been using a glass Steelseries pad a friend gave me a decade ago and it has been absolutely amazing. I love it.
Dang, buddy is strong as hell, casually squating 405 🔥
Received my glass superglide pad after watching this video, I've been loving it. I use no gloves seems fine for me, also required almost no adjustment.
I am sure I remember you trying the Skypad before and not being a fan, so it is kind of cool to see you revisit glass pads and stick to it for 30 days. I've got the Skypad 3.0 and Cerapad Kin, haven't tried the Pulsar yet because I'd heard if you have Skypad it's not hugely different; but kind of intrigued by it now.
I think for me personally I found that my micro corrections when using say flatline/R301 long range on Apex were much better (I tend not to jitter aim because it just feels like it's going to mess my wrist up and I'd like to be able to play FPS for a long time to come) but I also found that my close range click timing (PK/Wingmang) was off but that is probably just my mouse control.
One thing I did really like about glass pads is how unique/fun they feel to use. So many cloth pads these days just feel the same or are ever so slightly different. I think glass really challenges your aim too.
Omg finally I saw Optimum LIFT WEIGHTS 🤩🤩🤩
You are my go to tech man for everythingg.
I have used a glass mouspad for over two years know (Sykpad), and to answer your question how people can use it without a sleeve. I have really dry skin, when I game my hands/arms are getting colder, so little to no sweat for me, so I can't really stick to it. Alltough after a really hot today I stick to the pad yes, but fixable with a cool room.
Furthermore, pre prepared to buy new mouse skates, the glass doesn't wear down, but your PTFE Saktes will, after a really long time after use you should definitely change your skates. You can really feel your mouse getting slower and slower and lossing the speed of the pad if you're skates have worn out. Something you didn't say in your Vid. I would recommend the pad ecspecially for people that have trouble with aim tracking like me, combined with a light mouse it helped me get better tracking compared to my old cloth pad.
I agree to the rest of the Video completely, ecspecially getting used to it. As you said Dust can be a problem, if something like a hair gets stuck under your mouse you instantly feel it and breaks you outta game, so you can clean your Mouse skates or Pad.
Great Videos keep posting :D
I've always played w/ a max weight G502 for years. I'm gonna give this a go. What I'm thinking is w/ the heaver weighted mouse + accuracy. Cool idea.
def recommend from my experience and imo. me going from heavy mouse 108g or so with any hard mat, I aimed way better then now with a 60g mouse and a cloth mat. I couldn't put my finger on it until a bit later on why my aim got worse.
you're dead on. i play with a g502 on a textured metal corsair mouse mat. the heavier weight negates the micro jitters, while the low friction makes bigger movements so, so precise.
I've been using a shin sleeve on my forearm for the longest time when playing games and even for regular computer use. It protects my skin from friction against the table and mousepad, and it's pretty easy to put on and off.
I think the issue is most of us here have probably been using cloth pads for almost 20 years (or more)
I wonder if say in another 20 years the kids of today would have the same issues mentioned if they grow up using a glass pad
glass mouse pads are laminated with plastic so its just plastic you are gliding on.
Ain’t no way bro is a retired powerlifter💀
so after all, will you stick with the glass pad? Are you actually better on it? (or predict to be better after like another 30 days of practice?)
Would you say superglide pad is noticably more stable than skypad 3? I have the skypad 3 and I might consider the superglide one.
Im late af to this, but i own a superglide pad and its perfect, not too fast, but still quick, and you can control your movement very easily
Hope there are smaller pads. Those things are huge. Thanks for your channel, BTW. Really informative. 👍
Can’t wait till an update video on the custom mouse
Same Most excited for that onr
One*
6:20 dude that mccree outplay was insane. blinked at the exact time he pulled his ult trigger.
Out of curiosity, have you done an incline test for friction? It might be able to give more consistant values to compare, although the blow test was pretty cool. Basically, set the mouse on the pad and raise the mousepad from one of its edges. Have a level (some phones have a tool built in) and see at what degree does the mouse start to move. This only measures static friction between mouse and pad. Friction scales linearly so the weight of the mouse has no effect. The kinetic friction is always lower than the static friction so it gives you a general idea on that too.
Tracer movement 1:56, dude's handing out tech tips, informing you about the new tech products, and giving you game tips.
my alcohol stained anime deskpad keeps me in global so thatll do
I switched to the Skypad 3.0 last week and it was one of the best upgrades I've ever done, I'm upset I was so late to it. Compared to my old cloth mouse pad the glide is soooo smooth making my tracking and flicks 100x better. For a fast sens wrist player like me, this was perfect. I'll NEVER EVERRRR go back to any other mouse pad
His mouse is probably like -2 grams
I feel like there's an area that would be a sweet spot where you have low enough friction to not restrict input, but enough friction to help you *stop* moving. Physical mouse smoothing of a sort, where the tiniest inconsentencies get smoothed out. It makes sense that jitter would show up when friction gets low enough and I think the best solution is just... enough friction.
I've had the skypad for like 2 years and still cant find anything to gain a little friction. need grippier harder feet maybe, or a heavier mouse who knows
I think glass pads are a cool idea, and I sure some truly talented and practiced aimers can pull it off, but I think the slight amount of friction gained from a cloth pad give you better control and consistency in game. I also wonder if over time your mouse feet will become more worn down with a glass pad, but it seems that you didn't deal with that after 30 days so maybe its a non issue. Really appreciate your thorough review of these products because its really mirrors what my thought process and methodology would be if I were to buy something like this! :^)
Feet still going strong after multiple months, barely any wear. Consistency of the pad is beautiful. Suits me to the ground. Skypad 3.0 XL
I remember in the early 2000s a lot of my friends who I played Cs:source with played on a glass mouse pad, I always wondered why people stopped. Definitely considering trying one out, but I had no idea that they were so expensive!
skypad the OG? now listen here son. Let me tell you the story of the icemat. It came out in 2001 and was for a while the preferred pad for FPS gaming. Together with teflon pads for your mouse it was unparalleled. I do not know why people stoped using it but i can assure you that skypad is not the OG. Not even by a long shot.
For a while you could also get a textured plastic mat. was actually also quite good.
We need Optimum Gym content !
0:46 HAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAH WTF !!!!
thats the zero mouse
Can't wait for the new finalmouse Ultralite review 😉
My biggest love for them is a spray of dirty cheap windex and a microfiber and it feels like day one. No more random slow spots over time or worn out dirty cloth pads.
duuude i know this is a tech channel but Im sure we'd all love to see some gym content!!
What I've found with glass is that training with it regularly improves my mouse control when using my "competitive" cloth pads.
I've been using a Skypad 3.0 since May of 2022. You really don't need a sleeve, but keeping the room cool or having a fan blow directly on you helps. Baseline skin friction isn't noticeable. Sweat is.
I swapped from softpad to hardpad and had a similar experience. I used it for 1 year and swapped back because I didn't feel comfortable with the sensitivity, it hurt my wrist and I had less place to move as there are no desk-wide hardpads. You can have the exact same settings on a mouse, as soon as you swap your surface, your sensitivity can change drastically.
Pulsar has the XXL glass, which is 90cm wide
Thanks for this detailed video of your experience with glass mousepads, mate. This got me really curious as I've been a cloth mousepad user my entire life, and wanted to try a glass mousepad for something different. I purchased and have been using the L sized Pulsar Super Glide mousepad and Pulsar arm sleeve for 2 weeks now with a Logitech G Pro X Superlight.
Early thoughts are that it definitely takes a little getting used to, especially if you're coming from a cloth pad with more control. Regularly cleaning dust from the mousepad is a must, otherwise it feels like sand gritting under the mouse and it's just awful. This was really annoying at first, but I'm kind of used to it now.
I've experienced 2 spin outs from my mouse sensor, but thankfully in the Apex firing range and not a live game. Still, something to be wary of, at least with the G Pro Superlight. Maybe it had some light dust on it that I didn't realize, and I should quickly clean it with a microfiber cloth before every use.
I use 800 dpi 1.8 sensitivity for Apex and 5 in Overwatch. Using this mousepad when it's clean does feel pretty nice for tracking. While it seems okay for tactical shooters like Valorant and CSGO, it's probably not ideal due to lower stopping power, and I would agree players focused on tactical shooters should get a cloth mousepad with more control. I could be wrong, but I don't think a single CSGO or Valorant pro uses a glass pad, and probably for good reason. I know of a few in Apex (i.e. Zer0), but that could just be a Skypad sponsorship thing idk.
The idea of never having to buy another mousepad again as long as I clean and look after this Pulsar Super glide is somewhat appealing, but I'm not sure if this is for me long term yet, as I have mixed use cases and don't just play track heavy FPS games like Apex. I'll stick with it for at least 3 months as I'm not underperforming in games, and definitely need more time to get used to it. Give it a go if you've got the money to spare and want to try something different/fun, but don't' expect it to improve your game at all, especially not in the first several weeks.
hey man I've found this comment super interesting as someone whose considering upgrading my mouse & pad setup as I get more into aim training and shooters like Apex on PC, (was a console player until a year or so ago and haven't gotten into the competitive side of games on pc till now). As this comment was several months ago now, I'd love to hear if you're still using the superglide and what progress you've made with it, both from a performance improvement and end user experience perspective.
w song choice, love the production on the new pinkpanthress
I've got the XXL and XL size to coat the entire front part of my desk. I love it!
Nice Video!
By the way regarding the compression sleeves, I intuitively used one of my painting gloves for graphic tablets and it actually made a difference while playing, which was pretty cool :D
it basically serves as an Anchor Point
Would be cool if you could give some updates on the Mouse Wear on these Pads aka how often you would have to replace the Skates compared to using them on a Cloth.
Keep it up
optimum tech is the only one do a review and actually play the games. so thats nice. not like any other reviewers that never play games. lel.
Hey @OptimumTech. I am happy to see you have added a scroll wheel to your custom mouse! I would be very interested in buying one as I am a light mouse glass pad enthusiast. Please keep us posted on the production of the mouse and where to buy one.
3:15 also keeps your hands warmer!
and as anyone with cold hands can confirm with me, theres no harder nerf to your skill than your frigid ice witch hands unable to stay warm lol
Mother of father, the moment I saw that sleeve, I swear I lost my sh*t. I have extremely sweaty hands and I have decorated towel on my desk to keep it clean 😁 I tried some metallic pad from Razer some time ago, but overall it wasn’t a good experience. A couple years ago I saw something like that sleeve in an advertisement in the internet, but after searching I have found nothing related to what I was looking for. Part of this problem is because I live in Central Europe and it’s hard to find specific products like this. Thank you so much for both sleeve idea and glass mousepad 🙏
P.S. And don’t listen to all those chubby cheeks talking sh*t about “using sleeve for gaming”. I am the type of gamer who’s having fun in multiplayer games (Apex) when my team is doing well. And I am always the first one to show teammates that I am taking it serious. So if there is some thing that can have positive impact on my way to Preds, why not use it?! As you said, equipment is vital in any sport. And competitive games are sport.
We finally got the "why so buff lore" thx ali lol
Dope. Now all I need is a glass mousepad + special video gaming fingerless gloves to go with the free mouse that was packed into the prebuilt I bought 15 years ago, and I'll finally be ready to take on ranked.
In the end it's all about physics. The coefficient of static friction should be as close as possible to the kinetic coefficient of friction, like in human joints for example. That way you don't have this breaking loose effect to throw you off. I personally use the glorious ice pad with ceramic skates
5 or so years ago I cut a large sheet of aluminum to size, rounded the edges and painted it. Best mouse pad I have ever used. It’s super easy to repair when paint wares out.
So as a glass mousepad user, if you are experienced and feel like you are hitting a ceiling go ahead and get one, but it should not be your first mousepad. Having the cloth smooths out some of your inconsistency’s of aiming such as being jittery. After you get good with cloth pad Glass will help you build off of the basic skills and force you to master the fine details in your aim, it won’t come instantly and it takes time and practice to master but after you do you feel like can hit anything.
For the lowest-friction experience someone has to innovate ice skates on a wet ice pad.
I think that sleeve looks sick af. Does give some badass ninja vibes.
From my experience cordura pads have similar levels of friction and are more consistent in temperature changes. Glass also reveals if you have any sort of crumbs on your pad which is annoying
Id also recommend higher sens, its just generally better. Around 30 to 25 cm
I have cordura
Wow blast from the past! We used glass with teflon under the mats in the past. I think Steelseries were really popular with a "Steelmat" series. I think it was in the early 2000s :D
Ahh the good old days of using Icemat while playing Counter-strike in my teens.
This was 20 years ago and man does this make me feel old..
I've been playing with a 100 gram sensei and a razer goliathus control for over 10 years and now coming back to the market is just insane.
I feel like in a year people will move just their hand over a air hockey table and say "too heavy, too much stopping force"
Please do some deadlifts with 2 heavy PCs next video pls. GOATED tech channel as always.
bro's game skill is crazyyyy.
I've been playing with rubberised fingerless (just the tips) gloves and a neoprene compression fitting for padding my wrist for years. Bonus is no RSI because that's what an RSI wrist strap does. - also helps to keep my fingers warmer in colder months so they don't get stiff after long sessions either. With rubberised gloves (basic fabric work gloves with the palms and fingers rubberised) using a Hotas style joystick there's also much less need to grip hard to maintain hand placement.
Win all round.
Optimum aged 30 years while doing that squat 😂
God damn i could tell you had gains but the deadlift shocked me good on ya m8
I used to have a Steelseries hard pad for multiple years about 15 years ago. Abrasion has occurred over time in the areas where I moved the mouse frequently. It was more difficult to move the mouse in those areas. It felt slower. Imagine sliding on an ice sidewalk it's gonna be super smooth. Now try to do the same thing after Sidewalk Salt has been applied. You can still slide but it's gonna be much harder. I hope it makes sense. Another issue was the desk surface. It was okay on my computer desk but when I went to a LAN with my friends then it was a different story. I had to use a cloth pad to create a smooth surface and then I put the hard pad on the top. So I was using two mouse pads at the same time. Another thing was the friction. It wasn't super loud but it was noticeable.
5:09 that ignores the main reason most people switch to glass mouse pads, their cloth pads get worn out or dirty and they want something that lasts longer and is easier to clean
I would watch Optimum Tech lifting content
Optimum tech, you inadvertently created a new benchmark.
A real world power to weight ratio.
Total Deadlift weight divided by 454 (round up or down to one pound in grahams), multiplied by the total mouse weight.
Assuming you can dead lift 500 lbs and the mouse weighs 32g.
sum=(500 / 454) * 32 == 35.24
The higher the better (the less the amount of effort needed to physically move the mouse(theoretically)).
So, someone like me who can't dead lift much would have a score of maybe (250 / 454) * 32 == 17.62.
This brings physical fitness into the picture as who cares how light a mouse is if the user can barely lift a pencil?
I'm half joking.
I HAVE MAINED GLASS PADS FOREVER. I love the glass pads for sniping because you use your fingers and hands to get an amazing feel for small adjustments. but close quarters are rough because your hand sweats and sticks. The sleeve helps with removing this aspect from your arm but it still exists in other parts of your hand. another reason glass pads aren't good is the oils in your hand is constantly changing the slide on the glass. I recently made the switch to pads and am having greater success in close quarter battles.
old 3d printer bed is perfect. Spring steel+ultem sheet feels a bit extravagant.
Clicked on a glass mouse pad video and didnt expect to get mogged on