World's Most Advanced Gaming Mouse

Brand: Swiftpoint
Manufacturer: Swiftpoint Mice
Model: SM700
EAN: 0857737002087
Category: Gadgets & Tools
Price: n/a  (85 customer reviews)
Dimension: 1.57 x 3.54 x 5.12 inches
Shipping Wt: 0.26 pounds. FREE Shipping (Details)
Availability: In Stock.
Average Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
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Product Description

Place your hand on The Z to feel a level of intuitive control beyond anything you’ve experienced before – you’ll then understand why it was voted CES Gaming Innovation of The Year.

Lean the mouse, and your character leans, press harder on a button and unleash a stronger attack. Jump in a plane, spaceship or helicopter and with The Z’s gyroscope technology instantly switch from mouse to analog joystick control.

With The Z’s ergonomic design you can customize button placements to give lightning fast access to 18 button actions while barely moving your fingers. The buttons sense how hard you press, providing tactile vibration feedback, so you know when you’ve made a ‘deeper click’.

When playing FPSs, Third Person Shooters, MMOs / RPGs, MOBAs or games with driving or flying, The Z’s precision, speed, and intuitive control will bring more realism to your game and give you the edge.

It’s time to Play Different.

Features

  • LIKE A GAMING KEYBOARD AND MOUSE COMBO ALL IN ONE - Loaded with 13 buttons, 5 pressure sensitive deep click buttons, side buttons, gyroscopic gesture control, vibration feedback, OLED screen, RGB LED & onboard memory - it’s not surprising the Z was voted best gaming mouse at CES. Unique button placement offers a better way of clicking buttons giving you unrivalled speed & precision. Access dozens of different actions while barely moving your fingers - Perfect for FPS, MOBA, RTS & MMO gaming
  • PLAY LIKE A PRO: the Z mouse gaming software is powerful, customizable yet intuitive & easy-to-use. Start winning immediately with game detection & auto profile switching. Access 16 pre-made pro gaming profiles, source from our community or create your own. Any of the 13 buttons, deep click or gestures can become a keyboard, mouse, gamepad or joystick button. Record macros/combos like auto run, sniper mode (DPI shift), rapid reload / weapon switch, quick build, double click, or crouch jump
  • PRESSURE SENSITIVE DEEP CLICK BUTTONS - add at least 5 extra buttons & new dimension to your game. Click for one action, deep click for a 2nd or use them together for a combo. Vibration feedback indicates you’ve triggered a deep click. Fly a plane with the analog joystick function powered by the gyro! Store your settings directly on the mouse's onboard memory & check the OLED display for quick config, DPI, profile & more. Match your color theme with the RGB LED and dominate the competition
  • GAME LONGER IN COMFORT - Small, large, or XL hands the Z's ergonomic design fits like a glove. Play in comfort even during extended sessions. Further customize the Swiftpoint Z mouse by choosing your own button size & shape from the 4 included sets, 2 sets of adjustable bases/feet & a flight stick extender for joystick control. Wired to maximize performance & avoid the inevitable charging required with wireless gaming mice. Soft pads add side grip for the ultimate control. Glorious!
  • TRIED THE REST? TRY THE BEST - Logitech, Razer, SteelSeries, HyperX or Corsair - Swiftpoint Z will rival them all. 13 buttons, 5 pressure sensors, 12K DPI PixArt PMW3360 Sensor, mechanical switches, PTFE skates, a gyro & onboard memory. Profiles: Apex Legends, Borderlands 3, COD War Zone, Cyberpunk 2077, Destiny 2, PUBG, CS:GO, Dota 2, FFXIV, R6 Siege, Fortnite, Overwatch, League of Legends (LoL), Team Fortress 2 (TF2), Valorant & World of Warcraft (WoW). This is the final mouse you’ll ever buy

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Top Reviews

Not perfect, but good
by Alex (4 out of 5 stars)
September 29, 2017

The Good-

Ergonomics are great, key placement is fantastic & utility is exactly what I thought it'd be. Button cap alternatives are welcome & helpful.

The OK-

Software/firmware is satisfactory(!) It's missing a few functions I could have used (conditions/alternates, record-a-key*), but it's still flexible enough to let me work around it. And no glitches/issues so far! (Previous mouse, G600, had issues here)

The Bad-

Tilt/pitch sensors tend to wander, likely due to the desk instead of the mouse itself, so one of the buttons does indeed need to be a designated 'zeroing' button.

Tilt also maxes at a measly ~2 degrees before the whole mouse starts to pivot on an edge. That combined with a rather soft demarcation and little off-center click support makes leaning out of cover feel floaty rather than like a key-press. This is worsened by the "wander", since it relies on such tight tolerances which WILL be effected by desk movement/shifts.

Would have preferred a more tactile on/off zone, with stronger demarcations & a deeper (4-10*) tilt, but I may just need to get used to it (and set a quick vibration function for more feedback on where it activates)

If the 'flight extender' didn't block the optical sensor & sit on a grippy rubber boot, I'd probably try using that with a 50% (5*) threshold, but for now I'll have to try sticking with the 1.2* default.
-edit

Yes indeed setting vibrations help, but only to a limited degree. 2 degrees is simply too small a range of movement to use with this wooden desk I have. Even with a reset angles key, 'level' changes too much too frequently for it to help for more than 5 minutes.

Will need a rock-solid desk in order to use the narrow tilt reliably.
*-edit 9-29-18

They've added a record-a-key feature, and I've already used it! Seems to be designed well too- it defaults to 'tapping' the key, but if you go to edit that it pulls up a prompt to set the output release to the input release (like a normal key, exactly what I was going to do!). I'm impressed.
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Wildly configurable, with patience.
by Lurkily (5 out of 5 stars)
March 4, 2018

This is a fantastic mouse. The 'triggers' that can be pressed by straightening your fingers are something I wished for on a mouse since the 90's, when I was cutting my teeth on Doom and Quake. The configuration is a time-consuming and mostly manual, but is extremely powerful and not difficult to figure out. If you have the patience to study it for a little while, you'll do fine, though the manual will help.

Pros:

Wildly, WILDLY configurable without more than basic-middling knowledge of gaming devices needed.

Nifty OLED on the front left side, that can show you a variety of details, such as which profile is currently active.

Despite having thirteen buttons, every one is unique and distinct in its usage, leading to little confusion about which button you're pressing. (No massive thumb-button pads.

Middle mouse is accessible via side pressure, can be activated without rolling the wheel or leaving the left mouse button.

Lowered left/right/middle mouse buttons are really, really nice, and help keep me from accidentally bearing down on mouse buttons when I'm inattentive.

Complex combinations and macro actions can be configured for any action, even tilting the mouse beyond a certain angle.

Both button-down and button-up (and tilt beyond X, return from tilt beyond X) can be assigned separate actions.

Button press can be assigned to tap a key/button, press it, or release it.

Cons

Button layout is unfamiliar to most gamers, and will take some adjustment.

Configuration system is time-consuming and a little tedious.

Learning how to use the configuration in powerful, automated, and intelligent ways will probably take time.

To list all the possible button assignments, first I'd like to mention what all can be assigned to button presses.

Any button (and button release) can be assigned to a keytap, key press, or key release, a mouse or joystick button, console controller function, and any of the axes can register as a slider or an axis control. You can configure a vibration response, control the OLED (Which can display the axis measurements, your current profile, etc,) you can control profile settings, the logo backlight color settings, set up a repeated action, a wait command to space actions, two actions to alternate between, and you can use them as DPI controls.

You can also set up complex modifier keys - for instance, in their desktop profile left trigger is alt-tab. As long as you hold it, you can move the mouse left and right, up and down, to navigate the alt-tab menu. Right mouse is alt-control in the same way, allowing you to navigate open tabs in an application like a web browser by moving your mouse left and right while it's held down. One preset is to tilt the mouse far to the right to enter 'config mode' where the mouse has a number of new button presses available to change DPI or zero the pitch readings if your desk is uneven. This config mode is a preset profile that you can edit.

As for the control surfaces available:

Left, middle, and right mouse. The middle mouse can also be pressed by pushing the wheel from the left side, so you don't have to worry about accidentally using the wheel when you use middle mouse. These buttons know how much force is being applied. You can set these to work as an axis or a slider to activate a new action, or to repeat an action very fast when pressed hard. You can determine how much force is required to register as a 'deep click'.

There are two small buttons at the base of each mouse button. (With small and larger pads you can switch into place.) These also register force, and can have another action assigned to 'deep click'.

The 'trigger' buttons closest to your palm can have one keystroke assigned to straightening your finger to push them down, and another keystroke assigned to pulling your finger back to pull them, like a trigger.

The two buttons beside the left mouse are the 'front edge' and 'rear edge' buttons. They're just buttons.

Ditto the thumb buttons, they're exactly what you'd expect.

In addition, are three axis of control. You can tilt the mouse left and right, forward and back, and twist it left and right on the pad. Any of these controls can serve as a control axis. Tilt(yaw) can serve as leaning controls to lean only a little in a 3D shooter (if it supports an analog lean) or driving controls in a game like Mad Max or a racing game. The mouse comes with a base that snaps on with magnets, and you can use the pitch and yaw as a joystick for flight. It has a smaller flat base than the mouse, that helps you keep it level but makes it easier to tilt freely. I'm still not sure what I might utilize the twist left/right for.
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Like any peripheral there is learning curve and getting used ...
by John C. Griffin (5 out of 5 stars)
February 15, 2018

Like any peripheral there is learning curve and getting used to how it feels in your hand. Whether its a keyboard, mouse, joystick, controller, etc. I came from a Corsair M65 and loved the hardware dps adjustment and contour of the mouse. When I began using the Z, the first thing I noticed are the "wings" towards the bottom that allow your thumb and pinky to rest. After using the mouse for awhile, I changed out the trigger and fingertip buttons based on what felt right in games and applications. Using your entire finger instead of just the distal (tip) is genius. Simply straightening your finger and using the proximal, middle, or distal part of your finger to engage 3 separate button presses takes a little while to get used to, but instantly makes sense.

The option to "deep click" by adjusting the pressure sensitivity of the buttons adds another layer of intuitive control. In games that allow going prone, you can easily assign a crouch button, and then a prone state to the same button by varying the level of pressure sensitivity required to trigger the state change.

The software seemed a little daunting at first but you can easily just load up the global profile to get started. As you play games, or work, you can come up with ways to best utilize the different buttons and macros the software and hardware allows. Honestly, I initially planned to rate the mouse a 4/5 because the Mac support is limited to using 3rd party software that requires a license after a trial period. I use a Mac at work, and a PC at home. It would be nice to have the Z's amazing customization functionality in a productivity setting. I decided to rate the mouse a 5/5 because Swiftpoint never advertised the mouse as being natively supported on a Mac.
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Best and most expensive mouse I have ever used
by Jimmy Chiu (5 out of 5 stars)
February 7, 2019

I bought this mouse on June 5, 2018. It has been flawless for me. I play a lot of MMO and this mouse saved my fingers/wrist from burnout. For example, BDO, instead of pressing multiple keys to execute one combo, then another set of keys for another combo. I would macro the first combo with 1 click, then a DEEP click on the same button execute the 2nd combo. Tilting the mouse to left and right would execute dashing to left or right etc. Just really awesome.

Now, it has been 8 months and I ran into the first problem with this mouse. There are 2 padding stripes on the right side of the mouse. It came off last night when I was playing game and the sticky glue used for that rubbed all over the mouse. I just submitted a support ticket and we will see how the support stack up to the flawless mouse performance.

Will post an update to this review once I heard from the support.
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So cool, but lacking comfort.
by C. P. Boudreaux (4 out of 5 stars)
February 20, 2019

This is definitely the coolest mouse I've ever owned. All of the buttons feel great to click, the software is complex but works great, and it easily has the coolest features ever put into a mouse that work great, but it feels a bit odd to hold. It was designed for large hands, so if you have medium to small hands it won't feel all that great. You can still use it but you will have to really get used to it and make some adjustments.

I much rather how the large fingertip caps feel over the small but I was always clicking them accidentally. So I had to add something to make the left and right mouse buttons higher. I ended up using rubber furniture feet stickers and I just cut them to fit. The small side grips are also lacking, why didn't they just cover the whole side with the grip?

The biggest comfort issue is with the height and width of the mouse itself, I'm comparing it to the Logitech G502 in my pic and even though the G502 is longer it's still way more comfortable. The shape of the G502 is so nice feeling in comparison. I think my main problem is that the shape doesn't have a uniform curve to it like the G502 does. The left side of the Z is higher and it's awkward. I really do like all the button placements on the mouse though, so I hope they can one day make another Z, and make it have the comfort of the G502. For now I will stick with it and hope over time it becomes more comfortable to use because it's so nice having these features.
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Need to try this mouse before assuming it's to expensive!
by BrianH (5 out of 5 stars)
October 10, 2018

Picked this mouse up for $99 when it was on sale. I have got to say this is the best mouse I have ever used. I have two profiles currently set up in it and can switch between the two by simply tilting the mouse forward 20° or back 20°. Really great for multitasking with school and work. And great to tilt back for Gears of war 4 when I get the chance to play. Not to mention the ergonomics on this mouse are perfect. I am not good at playing games via mouse and keyboard. Wirh this mouse I have now successfully set it up to where I can do so and switch right back to work mode just by tilting. Weapon changes in FPS is nice jus tdd assigning it to the left and right tilt of 1.5°. Simply tilt left or right and I have the weapon I want. Beautiful!!!! And multitasking is so smooth. Have all my quick edit tools programmed to all the mouse buttons. I am flying through paperwork and CAD designs now!
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Great mouse if you need more than few buttons or just love to customize your setup.
by John (5 out of 5 stars)
April 11, 2018

Fantastic mouse. I replaced my G502 with this mouse and I could not be happier at this point with the Swiftpoint Z. Also the software that comes with it allows you to program the mouse to a much greater extent than I was able to on my old mice using Razer or Logitech software. I love the fact that I can program my profiles and save them directly into the mouse so they are stored there even if the software is not running.

I currently do not use the tilt function for anything other than profile switching so I hope they make a more budget oriented version without this feature to cut down on the price tag. Even at this price point I may pick up a second one to bring into my work so I don't have to transport it back and forth.

Comparing this to my G502 - The only button on my Swiftpoint that is difficult to use in the right trigger button when pulling up. My ring finger in not used to that action, but the left trigger is no issue at all. The feel of the Swiftpoint in the hand is near perfect for my hand and is by far the most comfortable mouse I have used that has more than three buttons. On the G502 only the left/right and G4 buttons were in the ideal location for my grip. All the other buttons were very awkward to reach without moving my grip. That being said the G502 in general still felt great in the hand.

Comparing this to my Naga Hex - The Naga felt great but I could not get used to the seven button layout as it was just not that intuitive and I found myself constantly pressing the wrong button. I also did not like the 12 button layout on my wife's G600 even though she swears by it.

The only negative I would really say about the mouse is that the software does not have training wheels. It only took me about 30min to dig through the default profiles to figure out how to use the software, but I'm a tech. If I gave this mouse to a friend who just wanted to play games and not do any customization, I doubt they would give the mouse a five star rating. I think they need to make community profiles, in the same way that steam does, available directly in the Swiftpoint application so that you can just search for what game you want to play and it could download a config.
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Best mouse ever made yet that I am aware of
by Kevin K (5 out of 5 stars)
October 14, 2018

I have a lot of expensive mice. This one is the best by far. Extremely intelligent design. I love the amount of customization and buttons.

I am tempted to buy a second one due to paranoia that it won't be available if I break mine.

The best mouse I had prior to this was a G903. I also have a RoG Spatha and Finalmouse...amongst others. I no longer feel that I need to keep compulsively buying new mice. None will better this Swiftpoint.

I have now bought a second one at full price for my other PC
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The mouse revolution!
by David Allen Clay (4 out of 5 stars)
April 3, 2019

The problem with mice today is that they all have the same features bundled together in specific packages. If you want a gaming mouse, you often have to choose between certain features and sacrifice others you may have wanted.

With the Swiftpoint Z, there is no compromise. You get extra buttons, complete freedom of key-mapping, and modular options that make sense.

After you first get the mouse, it will take some time getting used to, as is the case with most mice. But, I found the transition easier than most as this one feels more thought out with buttons in logical places. They are not just stamped on the sides without even a thought of distinction in how they feel. You know when you push a button it is the button you wanted to push.Talking about pushing buttons, these buttons feel great, they are snappy and give good feedback, there are no miss clicks with this setup. As you progress, you might find you may want a button to do more than one function. They thought of that also with both the implementation of "deep clicks" and tilt sensors, you can get one button to do a multitude of different commands.

As for the deep click function, my first concern was knowing how much I pressed the buttons, and they thought of that also. The vibration feature on the mouse is less a gimmick of haptic-feedback for games and more a direct feedback interface that you can configure to ensure you are hitting the level of deep press that you are after. with this system alone, I have my left fingertip button do a double left click to select a word, if I press it down to 30% it does a third left click selecting the entire paragraph or line, and lastly at 60 % it discards the left clicks and does a select all command via "ctrl + a." My right fingertip button is setup where the command isn't executed until released, allowing a group of commands to be performed here as well. If I just click, it will copy, if I press down to 30% it will paste, at 60% it deletes and finally if I accidentally over-click I set 100% to cancel all commands. each command finishes by telling the driver to ignore the previous level to ensure I do not do more than one command from the same click. All of these deep click functions are accompanied with a vibrate command to let me know I had hit the level I need to execute that command and each level deeper gives a stronger vibration.

This goes into the next amazing feature that at first sight appears "gimmicky," the OLED display on the side. This becomes an amazing tool while first setting up your mouse as you can set it to display tilt angles and deep click forces so you can more fine tune your clicks based on your own preference. It can also display your current profile so you know what commands to expect from the buttons. And it offers another awesome option to display custom out put. Now if you really want, you can have it say some cheesy message, but its power comes from displaying the command it is performing so you can be sure your configuration worked.

As for tilt, I use this sparingly still though I do absolutely love the feature. It is about becoming accustomed to the multi dimensional nature of this mouse. The tilt command can provide both digital and analogue outputs as well as become a modifier to change the commands on the buttons while tilted. This will at first become more of a hindrance until you get used to the tilt and become better at moving the somewhat heavy mouse without tilting it. Afterwards, it becomes the greatest tool to open new options to your fingertips for fast macros or if using ahk, designated hotkeys to run scripts , programs and advanced features on productivity apps.Though the app itself does not support opening opening other programs, through AHK, this can be accomplished with ease.

The advanced tilt features through the flight stick adapter have not been utilized by me as I have not had a use for this yet so I cannot comment on full analogue support. Though the software appears to do so and the mouse does show up in the usb controllers window with analogue and button functions, so for those who want to use this as a joystick, all the features are there for that.

With all this praise, you know there must be some downsides. Though this is true and they will be listed, none have them have detracted me from this mouse, just been at most a minor annoyance though your mileage may vary.

First, the software. Though it is powerful and does allow a multitude of options and customization, it comes at the cost of user friendliness. The UI is not for the feint of heart, and what could take seconds in other manufacturers software sadly takes much longer in this software. This is because of the many options and key-binds in which can be applied to any button press. I love its layout, but also loath it when it comes to just assigning a simple key-press. I feel the developers need to add a simple UI and a toggle to switch between them. This being said, the most powerful part of this is that the software does not need to be running while using the mouse as long as the profile you want is saved on the mouse which is done by default. I currently have 16 profiles and am only using half of my on-board memory. This is because of some of the other advanced features which I won't get into.

The weight though not the heaviest is still quite a bit more than the standard market. This alone would not have been a con to me as I switched from the Logitech G502 which is heavier. It is more because the grips aren't grippy and I find my hand in an awkward position when lifting the mouse sometimes. I am currently waiting on a package from Dragon Grips to make my own grips for the mouse. For this price I wish I did not have to spend that money on a customization that should have absolutely been incorporated in the base design of the mouse. This is the only reason I give this product 4 stars.

Lastly on my list is not as much a con as it is the only sacrifice and therefore feature request I would like to see in possible newer iterations of this design. As I switched from a G502 and have used primarily Logitech mice there is one single feature that I miss, Infinite Scroll. I have incorporated a pseudo-infinite-scroll, but it is not the same as unlocking the mouse wheel and just giving it one big spin and stopping it when you reach where you want on extensively long web-pages. I added a form of this by creating a looping scroll press while a button is held, and then adding a faster feature by modifying the press with a tilt and looping a page up/down press to get a somewhat similar effect. Though I would very much have preferred to just have the feature built into the mouse as a mechanical switch instead like Logitech did.

With all that being said, I have switched and am not looking back despairingly, but looking forward anxiously looking for the next binding to speed up my productivity. This mouse is nowhere near a gimmick in any market but "maybe" the RGB as I never have a use for that. High praise and a huge thank you to the team at Swiftpoint for making such an amazing peripheral and the people who backed them to make this happen. This truly is the mouse I have been looking for.
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The Mouse for Designers/Editors
by Amazon Customer (5 out of 5 stars)
August 6, 2019

I've been searching for the Holy Grail of mice, and I found it in the Swiftpoint Z.

I'm a designer/editor, not a gamer. Photoshop, Premiere, Lightroom, 8-10 hours a day on a Mac.

I have large hands that can palm a men's basketball, and my mouse hand (right), has been broken and healed, but cramps (not a flesh wound) from hours of usage.

I'm also a fussy person, (do you eat Sir Robin or have tea first?) and don't settle on a decision easily. Initially I wouldn't settle for anything but a Bluetooth mouse bc of travel, however, I sacrificed this really infinitesimal feature for comfort, and I'm thrilled I did.

Magic Mouse 2, too tiny, incredibly uncomfortable. Love the touch features, but for what I do, unreasonable for extended use. Not for me. Returned.

Magic Trackpad 2. How awesome is that input device?! Have been using a Macbook Pro for years, intuitive gesture controls, large surface area, can use with third party stylus for precision outlining/masking. But an awkward angle, and using the tip of my finger to click thousands of times per day gives me that aggravated pain when you know you're supposed to be inside the Trojan Bunny to surprise the Frenchmen, but you're not.

Logitech MX Master 2. Nifty idea. Input controls on buttons, software that works on Mac, including gesture controls, clearly there's a pattern I'm creating here. But, even for my gorilla hand, it's too big, somehow. Not relaxing in the palm, difficult to click the buttons bc of the size, and it's angled slightly to the right, which promotes the user to rest their wrist on the desk at an odd angle.

I was about to give up and stay in the castle with the nurses, the MX was good enough. I went to best buy, tried the grip on other mice, liked the Corsair M65, and the driver was only for PC, of course it was.

And then, a cube with a Z in the middle, appeared on the horizon, a 2D animated, grumpy old man of a God spoke to me, this is what you've been searching for, the Swiftpoint Z. The price was high, but it's what I love about our age of consumerism, independent companies need to charge this for the labor they put in. And it's worth 100x the investment.

Answer me these questions 3.

Mac Driver? Flawless. Programming your own unique keystrokes for the mouse is brilliant, I know this isn't new for gamers, but for me, being able to fully customize what I want out of my mouse was inspiring, and intuitive, and it has made editing and designing speedier. I had no problems figuring out how to operate the driver software. And I really feel like I haven't even tapped into the potential this mouse posses.

Feel? Natural, buttons easy to click, the thumb and ring finger rests spread my hand to a comfortable, not pinched, or expanded position.

Would I recommend it to another designer? Absolutely. This has assisted my productivity and health in just a few weeks. A perfect mouse.

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