The best!
I bought a Naga mouse a few years ago and it has been the best purchase I have made for playing MMOs. My fingers are too short and stubby to hit key 6 on up. I think it works great for MMOs as well as Overwatch. I have moved a few key binds to my numerical pad because my fingers couldn't reach as far. I know it's not for everyone, but I definitely recommend it. It takes a little time to adjust and get used to, but it works out great in the end.
The corsair mouse has actually been out for a couple of years now. The original Scimitar had lots of driver issues and no onboard storage, so I returned it almost immediately. The new(ish) pro version solved all those issues.
Yeahhh, only go with Razer if you want crappy customer support and a regular driver update scheme that’s specifically designed to make hardware obsolete before its time so that you have to buy a new one every few months...
I went trhough 3 Nagas. while the side buttons are good, the main left and right click buttons tend to break. more precisile the trigger below it, is made out of plastic thats too soft and it will grind out a grove until your clicks don'T work anymore. After that i tried the logitech one and for me personally it's horrible design now i'm on the roccat nyth. it's modular design really helps to build the mouse best suited for you. i currently run 8 buttons on the side with the resting place for my thumb to also lift the mouse without the risk of accidental button presses.
I find the Razer buttons too small for my ham like mitts, the best mouse I ever had was the Madcatz MMO7, its unique design made it very easyto pick up and play well, build quality was a bit iffy though. Since I can't buy another one thanks to Madcatz going bust, I've switched to the G600, I find it better for those with longer/fatter fingers and the quality is second to none.
My logitech has lasted longer then 3 razer nagas did, and it has shift mode.
/cast !MetamorphosisThis should work and is much shorter
As a woman with smallish hands, my Razer Naga allows me to more than double my accessible keybind options (I can only use one row past WASD in any direction). My only complaint is that the first one I bought back in...2012? was noticeably smaller and easier to manage, especially with the clips to change grip size. It finally died after constant use a year ago, and the current model is right on the edge of too big for my hand. Unfortunately, I have never found a smaller mouse with the 12 button thumb pad that I'm now hooked on.I'm hoping that with the rising visibility of female gamers, some savvy tech company will see the need for smaller gaming peripheral gear (I do not even want to talk about the struggle to find a decent headset for my tiny peanut skull).
Yeah, I don't understand the complaints with the Razer Mouse build quality either. I had a 2012 Naga Epic for 4 years of continuos use (2013 - 2017) that had no issues until the sensor died on me after doing a Mythic dungeon. Have had my Trinity for over 6 months with no issues and it's the same with the other stuff i have from them, a 2013 Blackwidow Chroma keyboard that hasn't faulted yet and 2013 Tiamat 7.1 and yes that did slightly fall apart (the housing around the mic fell off) but after 2 years of almost continuous use and i was sent a new headset under warranty in 2015 that hasn't had a problem to this day. However, I do agree with the annoyance of the non-removable grips as I would have prefered they retained the switchable grips instead of the switchable button panels
I've been using a Logitech G700s for the last year or so. It's served me well.
I use the addon Bartender4 to make my Action Bars three columns wide and four rows tall, to match the shape of my mouse's buttons. Then I use Shift and Ctrl as modifiers for two other 'Action Bar Grids' I keep on the left and right of my primary Action Bar. Having the visual reminder on-screen made it much easier to remember the layout of my mouse.