Mad Catz B.A.T. 6+ Performance Gaming Mouse
$39.99
$99.99
60% off
Reference Price
Condition: New
style: B.A.T. 6+
Top positive review
15 people found this helpful
Currrently - The best game mouse available
By Amazon Customer on Reviewed in the United States on July 27, 2023
My last mouse was a Steel Series Rival 500. Steel Series has decided to turn their drivers into a massive marketing portal. You have to create an account on their website and "Log Into" Steel Series in order to use their drivers. Plus they started injecting advertisements onto the desktop. Yeah. Ergo, I am ejecting Steel Series out of my PC. See yah. I found this Mad Catz mouse and it seems to be wide enough (skinny mice give me cramps) and have enough buttons for me, so I ordered it. I'm so sad I didn't upgrade to this mouse long ago. First really really really cool thing about this mouse, is that it doesn't use any special drivers. You read that right. It's automatically seen as a standard HID device by windows. It's hidden super power is that it carries it's configuration and processing on-board the mouse. Not on your PC. Meaning if you moved this to another PC or other device, it will still behave exactly the same. So how it pulls off this trick; It has four profile memory slots. They are: Black, Red, Blue, and purple. There is a dedicated (unmappable) button to toggle through the four profiles. You don't have to use all four profiles if you don't need them. But you can. This is where your configurations live, on the mouse itself. The software that comes with this (download from Mad Catz) is a configuration editor. Now it takes a bit to wrap your head around this, and there are no instructions or help files. *sigh* But here's how it works. The editor has (unlimited?) profiles that you can create or edit. When you get it how you want, you choose which mouse profile you want to "apply" to (Black, Red, Blue, Purple). I find it works best if you manually put the mouse into the profile mode (example "Red"), then create a profile named "Red" in the editor, and apply it to the second slot with the editor. It's sorta janky and it's not explained that the editor itself has profiles, and the mouse has slots, and you can flash any profile to any memory slot on the mouse. It's a little buggy, but once you get it and grasp the concept, the power behind it becomes apparent. The downside of flashing a mouse with a config (or set of configs) is that there is no software running on your PC to auto-select a profile when you boot up a particular game. I have two profiles I use, one for desktop (Black) and one for gaming (Red), my blue and purple profiles aren't used yet. I might find a game someday that need a radically different setup, and I'll use the blue or purple. I won't delve into all the settings and macros you can create and so forth. You can do pretty much any setup that any modern mouse can do. DPI settings, remap buttons, setup a sniping button, assign key combos. It's all there. This is it. The Holy Grail of gaming mice. Better than my old Logitech G700s, better than my Steel Series Rival 500. You can change the weight, the length, the grippiness, it comes with a slew of replaceable grip panels and has a wrench for adjustments built right into the rear. I mean seriously, how has this mouse not set the gaming world on fire? I can only speculate that the lack of documentation means some users can't get a good grasp on it's configuration. The separation of editor with it's profiles and the flashable memory slots on the mouse itself is never explained anywhere. Finally, I've read where someone claimed the mouse had lag, but I've measured it to less than .006 seconds, and since human response time runs around .200 seconds, this isn't factor at all. It's as fast or faster than any mouse I've ever seen. So there you go. That's it. I love this mouse. It's has features no other mouse has, and for less than $100, it's a total steal.
Top critical review
5 people found this helpful
Failed after one year.
By Kindle Customer on Reviewed in the United States on January 7, 2025
I'm an IT technician with (as of this year) 25 years of experience in the field. Evaluating hardware performance and performing diagnostics, maintenance, and break/fix are just part of my daily routine. I've gotten to play with most of the new hardware as it came out and have seen just about every sort of peripheral you can imagine. When I buy a piece of kit, I buy it to last. I bought a Cyborg RAT 7 back in April, 2012. It was the best mouse I've ever owned and lasted until December, 2023. I haven't seen reliable performance like that from a peripheral that sees daily physical use from anything built after the 1990s. Hoping to find the same quality in the successor and next model, I bought the Mad Catz RAT 8+ just a few days later. The RAT 8 lasted from December 2023 until December '24, when I started having issues with the left click button registering inputs. It would register ghost inputs. Phantom double clicks. Not register clicks. Not register holding. I disassembled and cleaned it, my first assumption being debris got in the switch, and for a time it worked. Then the switch failed entirely a few days ago and I've since replaced it. I can't recommend a product that fails just outside of the warranty period, when a previous iteration of the product lasted for a decade. Mad Catz is not Cyborg. I suggest giving this a pass until they fix the issues with it, which I doubt will happen.
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