SteelSeries Rival 100, Optical Gaming Mouse - Alchemy Gold

(1797 reviews)

Price
$16.49

Style
Quantity
(20000 available )

Total Price
Share
98 Ratings
48
31
15
2
2
Reviews
  • Kirk

    > 3 day

    89 grams, small, and flawless sensor. Copies tend to have tough clicks and the sensor is a bit towards the back instead of centered. This mouse is amazing all around and I have no issues with the click toughness or sensor position after a day of getting used to it. If you want to try it, its a great price for an awesome mouse that has a few (in my opinion) minor drawbacks. The pricing makes it all worthwhile and its far better than most similarly priced mice.

  • Stephen R. Bachinski

    > 3 day

    All the buttons feel good to click, including the chunky (in a good way -- easy to thumb) side buttons. The DPI adjustment works fine. I play a decent amount of Overwatch, and found this excellent for that. My Tracer game went way up from a cheap WalMart mouse. XD

  • YourGFJemma

    > 3 day

    I bought this as a gaming mouse. Wired. I am very happy with it, the top gets grimy very easily though. I end up scratching off what gets stuck on it. Over all though good mouse, very satisfied.

  • Letalis

    > 3 day

    The Basics Med-sized, 90g, ambi-shaped mouse with 2x thumb buttons on the left side and a DPI button on top. Uses the “TruMove1” sensor that goes up to 7200DPI & 240IPS. RGB, optional software. 30m switches. Textured plastic sides, roughened matte plastic on top. Even though it carries the Rival name, it looks much more like a smaller Sensei 310. Testing time prior to review was 3 days. The Good Software is great. Lots of options for lighting. Macros, whole 9 yards. Steelseries possibly has the best software out there – it is light on the system while being reliable and presenting lots of options in a clean GUI - can’t ask for much more than that. Sensor is an updated 3325 but, I must say that whatever Steelseries did to upgrade the sensor, it worked. In my accuracy testing, the R110 scored a 92% average which puts it in the elite company of the G203 and G403 and well beyond any 3325 I’ve tested. Not only did they increase the malfunction speed, but the snappiness feels like it’s there and accuracy is good. The TruMove1 sensor is a win. Even though I’d prefer a 3360/3366 or TruMove3, this sensor will still do nicely and I easily put it above the 3310. I like the rough texture on the top of the mouse, even more so than the fiber-reinforced texture on the Rival 310. The 310’s finish felt like it would flake off, this feels harder and more durable. Cable is rubber and flexibility is outstanding. One of the best I’ve seen and on par with the Rival 310. It is also not especially grabby, I just wish they’d made it black instead of gray so it wouldn’t stand out as much. No rattles. Build feels solid overall. The shape is safe. It does not strike me as being particularly excellent for any grip style, but good for a variety of medium hand styles. The Middling Side buttons have excellent tactility and short travel. However they are also thin and angled outward creating a sharp feeling. They overthought this, should have gone with a flatter, more basic shape as with the Rival 310. RGB looks good thanks to decent color depth and brightness, but colors do not change smoothly – the G203 far surpasses it here. Scroll and logo are lit. Unlike the Rival310, their colors cannot be set independently. Liftoff distance is roughly 2 DVDs. Not as bad as some of the horror stories I’ve read, but not the 1 DVD gold standard. Did not affect gameplay. The sensor is also mounted toward the rear of the mouse. Mice tend to feel snappier when that is forward. It did not affect me in-game. The mouse weighed 90g with a little bit of cable. For some reason it is the heaviest 90g mouse I’ve ever tried. It feels at least 95g to me, if not more. No finger grooves. There is a little bit of a bulbous curve to the mouse, just like the Revel. Not the best. Flatter buttons as found on the Rival 310 would have felt much better. The scroll wheel is pretty difficult to press, but usable. The scroll steps are well defined but not audible (a plus) or tactile (a negative). The scroll wheel has a nice textured tread to it and the RGB looks nice. As safe as the shape is, it feels rather long and narrow in a pedestrian kind of way. As someone biased toward a fingertip grip, I’d have loved to see the Rival 110 end up maybe .5cm shorter. The plastic sides are a hard, textured plastic. It baffles me why Steelseries, Thermaltake and others think this approach works in anything but the most basic sense. The basic matte plastic used on the sides of the Nixeus Revel is superior and the rough plastic on the top of the very same mouse is vastly superior in both feel and grip. Grip on the Rival 110 is only adequate because of the shape ad weight of the mouse. The material choice doesn’t especially hurt grip, but it’s supposed to help, right? As with the TT Iris and Ventus R, it’s a poor design decision and deserves to be flagged. The good news is that it is durable and won’t polarize as much as the silicone grip on the Rival 310 and Sensei 310. The Bad Primary clicks are attached to the shell and quite stiff. They do seem to break in slightly with use though, similar to Zowie mice, then again it could just be me adjusting to them. There is noticeable pretravel on the primary clicks to the point of being distracting at first. After using Logitech mice it feels strange to press a click as far as you would to bottom out a Logitech…and still not get a click out of it. The effect is a mild but annoying sponginess ending in a sprongy snap. (Look mom, I made a word!) The right click was a little loose. Sometimes it would rattle when bumped downward but not enough to actuate the switch underneath. Eliminating the pretravel would solve this minor point. Conclusion The marks against the Rival 110 are few, but the positives are generically weak and there is a whole lot of middling. It is an uninspiring ok to good mouse, mostly due to a surprisingly competent sensor that seems on par with the Mercury. Overall, it is not as good a mouse as the G203 in most areas, but it does offer a safer shape and that makes it a viable alternative in the $20-30 range. I’d probably even take this mouse over the MM520 thanks to the better thumb buttons. If SS were to flatten the primary buttons, flatten the thumb buttons, use matte plastic on the sides, reduce length by 5%, reduce weight to 80-85 grams and reduce primary click and scroll resistances by 30% (and separate primary clicks from shell), all while keeping price under $40…that would make the Rival 120 an A+ in my book. All told though, the 110 aint too bad. Bang for the Buck: B Nit-Noid Rating: 8.4

  • CHAD A SCHULTZ

    Greater than one week

    Good mouse. Good DPI settings and light weight. RGB is a bit cheap, but works fine.

  • Blibity

    > 3 day

    The mouse is great. Had it for over a year playing FPS games and its still going strong. But the mouse software has become a nuisance. They force a new updates as often as possible just to make you look at their item store.

  • Shteve

    > 3 day

    3.5 / 5 This mouse was replacing a (very) old Razer Diamondback, and I am returning it as it does not live up to my expectations. I really only had 2 criteria for this mouse: 1) Feels good in my hand 2) Two side buttons for my thumb (I map them for a couple of games that I play) For me, this mouse isnt what I was looking for in either case. Let me be blunt here- this mouse feels like a toy in my hand compared to the Razer. This might be one me- I knew the mouse was made out of plastic, but everything about the body of the mouse feels flimsy to me. The scroll wheel is fine, and it seems to track well, so really just the feel of the plastic in my hand is not working for me. For the second point, the two buttons are indeed on the side, but they take a good effort to depress. The Razer I was used to had almost hair-triggers for the mouse buttons and the side buttons. This may have been due to age, but the Rival 110 feels very stiff in comparison. So, for those two reasons, I am going to send it back. As it turns out, if nothing is wrong with the mouse, you have to pay to ship items back. That has led me to decide to buy all future computer hardware (well, most of it at least) from my local Best Buy, because that way I can try something out, and bring it back within 2 weeks with no penalty. This mouse is not for me, but for the price, it might be worth it for you. If you want a stiff-ish clicking gaming mouse, and you dont mind the plasticy feel of the thing, this might be a good buy for the price.

  • Grateful Ted

    Greater than one week

    After a few days it stopped clicking.. .it still worked but you couldnt feel the click. Still like the brand though I should have known better than to get the cheapest possible one.

Related products

Shop
( 2011 reviews )
Top Selling Products