Reviewing the Razer Naga Epic mouse: 12 buttons you never knew you wanted

But I did. For you. What follows is my week with the Razer Naga Epic, the newest product in the Razer Naga line that takes the Razer Mamba's wireless successes and adds them to the Naga's MMO-focused capabilities. The result is an MMO mouse that is solidly built, gorgeous on the eyes, and -- after the initial shock of change to the Naga's own brand of world view -- a customizable powerhouse that has your thumb doing acrobatics you never thought it could.
Here are some quick facts for people who enjoy bullet lists:
Mouse features
- 17 programmable buttons, including the 12-button thumb grid
- 1ms response time
- wired or wireless mode
- charge station doubles as wireless station
- 16 million color choices for illumination
- special optional in-game addons for mouse configuration
- Razer Naga Epic mouse
- charging dock
- rechargeable battery
- 3 interchangeable side panels -- three grips
- certificate of authenticity
- quick start guide
- master guide
- Razer stickers (I love stickers)
The Naga design is one that takes some getting used to, mostly because of the new expectations you have to let yourself begin to understand. The same movements are present, but now there is a lot more precision for your thumb to learn.
It sounds daunting, but it isn't. Previously, I would rock the lower part of my thumb back into the side button on my Mamba to hit the lower side button on the mouse. Now, I make the same motion, but now I'm hitting one of the Naga Epic's many side buttons bound to the feature.

Before I configured any buttons, I switched the Naga to "number pad" mode instead of "123" mode. This told the mouse to use the number pad as the input keys for the Naga's 12 side buttons that I would be using in-game. (Make sure Num Lock is on, too.) The configuration utility that lets you mess with the Naga's settings is easily navigated and has options for the color of the mouse's glow, macros, keybindings outside of WoW, and much more. You can even tweak performance of the cursor and movement, but I was perfectly happy with the mouse's speed and accuracy.
I don't use my number pad in WoW for macros, so these keys were all ready to roll without any new button mapping. Instead of using the Naga's own WoW addon, I loaded up Dominos and made a 3x4 bar, tucked it over on the side, and keybound up the bar with the corresponding numbers/keys from the Naga. Then I dropped the abilities onto the positions where I wanted them. You can go with Razer's own addon for the Naga if you choose to, but I wanted to see if I could work it on my own with my own setup.
Performance on day 1 was all about learning the ropes and getting a feel for the newness that I was dealing with. The mouse is a tad smaller than my Mamba, so the initial shock was there but wore off quickly. Slowly but surely, I began to feel my way around the mouse, and using my little number pad action bar as my guide, began firing off abilities when and where I needed them without hesitation from my mouse, not the keyboard.
People told me that the back buttons on the Naga's number pad were hard, if not impossible, to reach. My hands did not have as much trouble as that, but I can understand how it could be an issue. For me, it took a little bit of practice outside of a clearly established comfort zone, but the way I got around this was to bind crucial abilities up front and the lesser-used abilities in the back. That way, I had to make a conscious decision to hit that ability and still had the added convenience of not having to reach over to my keyboard to do it. With that setup, I wasn't having any trouble.
Day 2
Day 2 was all about learning the finer points of the Naga Epic and giving myself the requisite time to do lots and lots of heroics with it as my primary input device. Theories are great and all, but I wanted to be able to deal with stressful situations and not let my crazy thumb get the better of me and start mashing mouse buttons in a jam. Thankfully, this wasn't the case. As a warrior tank, I had bound my cooldowns to numbers 4-6 on the mouse and movement-related abilities to buttons 1-3. This setup worked splendidly.
There was a lot of learning still to be done, and I missed a few clicks and might have fired off a Shield Wall or two that I didn't necessarily intend to -- but the week was still young, and so far the Naga impressed me. Hitting the settings again, I began to tinker with the color of the glow, changing the aura on the fly from yellow to blue to red and back again. I settled on a nice Horde red.
The second day with the mouse was also the wireless test day. After giving the whole setup one day to charge, I went wireless from battery beginning to battery end. Suffice to say, the battery lasted a good long while -- easily all day -- but looked a little low after a long day of heavy use. The specs say the battery can last 12 hours of continuous use, which isn't a generous estimate; it worked for a good 12 hours straight.
Thankfully, the mouse is a combination wired/wireless system in which the same cord that connects the charger/wireless base station to the computer can be plugged directly into the mouse for a wired connection. Surprisingly, I saw no difference in speed or responsiveness when using the mouse in wireless mode. I was told back during BlizzCon that the 1ms response time was the same across both configurations, and that seems to be the case. I tossed aside my last wireless mouse due to interference and slowness, but the Naga Epic performed perfectly. As a wireless Mamba user, I expected the same performance from the Naga Epic and was satisfied.

Days 3 through 5 were all about incorporating the mouse into my daily life. I am the type of person who does not really like to buy specialized gadgets or peripherals because, as a money-conscious consumer, I've got a limited amount of resources to bring new technology into my life.
As a general do-everything mouse, the Naga Epic was fine. The heft of the mouse was fine, and its precision pointing works just as you would expect it to. The Razer mice that I've had before have always performed admirably in that regard.
My only issue with the Naga Epic is that the buttons for back and forward in my web browser were now positioned on top of the mouse rather than to the side. That took some getting used to, but it wasn't a deal-breaker. I've been meaning to switch back to a gesture-based system on Chrome, anyway ... However, I could see how this might bother some people during everyday use.
Days 6-7
The last two days of my Naga testing were all about raid environment testing and running with my 10-man group. I'd taken the time to learn and practice with the mouse in 5-man content and had graduated up to some leaner, meaner fights.
For the most part, things went swimmingly. A good number of abilities that had once been just the tiniest bit inconvenient were not a thumb press away. I did not have the feared "panic mash-all-buttons" moment I thought I was going to; however, I did mis-click a Heroic Leap and die on the Blackwing Descent elevator -- hardly the Naga's fault, though, as I am generally considered an idiot with WoW elevators.
Essentially, having the keypad of my keyboard available to me without taking my hand off the mouse was a treat and a surprise. You get a host of new options and more for your thumb to do, while freeing up a lot of keybinds that might have been a pain to press. Raiding was tense at times, but after getting a feel for where things were and how the mouse reacts to my presses, things began to take off pretty well.
Hand size
A quick disclaimer before we begin that have to do with hand size, personal preference, and all that jazz: I am reviewing this mouse based on its size relative to my own hands and my own preferences for input hardware. My review is all about my own personal experience, and yours may vary because we all have different hands. However, I can promise you that I do not have little dainty 4-year-old hands, nor do I have Rossi-sized bear paws that are capable of felling a wild boar. My hands are average to large.
With that said, the Naga Epic felt great in my hands. The three sizes, or grips, the mouse can transform into give the hardware a setting for most everyone. While smaller than my Mamba, the Naga Epic didn't lose any of the heft of Razer products. Bigger hands would want to use the largest grip, since you can kind of rest your hand down and to the right of the body of the mouse.

There's a reason I wrote so many words about learning to use the Naga Epic -- it's a device you'll need to learn. You're going to spend the first few moments in adoration, followed by a scant "I can never do this," which will dissipate quickly into "I could get used to this." And, thankfully, you most likely will.
It's like culture shock, really. Given time and a little patience, it becomes an invaluable tool that works towards creating more for your mouse hand to do, giving you the power to never have to take your hand off of the mouse, allowing you to continuously move and adjust your camera. If you never pressed your keypad or top row number keys before, you're opening up a host of new buttons and options for your character to utilize.
You may not ever hit each and every button on the Naga, but just the options with the first two rows of buttons make the Naga Epic a really cool device. Other MMO mice play with the nature of your thumb and have you moving your thumb off of a focal point to press buttons radially out from its default position. The Naga Epic is more like a keypad, where you rest your thumb on it, but press the ability you need, rather than the direction the ability is in. Personally, I'm a fan of the Naga philosophy.
So the bottom line is that if you're already a Naga user, the Naga Epic gives you the wireless options you've probably wanted and a great, long-lasting battery and response time to boot. If you're not part of Haus of Naga (nah-gah, ooh la la) yet and you're interesting in trying something new, I'd say give it a shot. It's a clever system, one I never thought I could enjoy, but it grew on me and began to open up options and ideas for keybinds I never thought I would have had.
If the price tag (around $129.99) is a bit much for you but you still want in on the Naga action, the original wired Naga and the new Molten Naga Special edition are going for around $79.99.
Someone on Twitter asked me, bottom line, am I still using the Naga now? The truthful answer is that I would be -- but it is happily packed up in its box, awaiting its new owner: one of you lucky readers/listeners. Did I say listeners? Oops. You'll just have to wait for an announcement tonight for when we're giving away this bad boy.
Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Hardware
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Reader Comments (Page 2 of 5)
Paradoxx Feb 18th 2011 12:08AM
Seriously? You tools are downgrading an opinion on a mouse?
It is refreshing to know that, even as someone who plays WoW way to much, there are people out their with more pathetic lives.
pancakes Feb 18th 2011 12:07AM
I've been playing with a naga epic for a few weeks now, and I worried that the buttons would be too small and i'd never be able to hit the correct ones, but within the hour of first using it, I could hit every button correctly, every time.
It really is an excellent (if pricy) mouse.
SR Feb 18th 2011 4:23AM
Paradox... Reading your comments is like reading a non-WoW player shit-talk about how sad or bad it is. Seriously. Can it with the prepubescent yammering and open yourself up to some flexibility.
First off, you sound like you would bash a regular numpad or a calculator or even an old phone with a 3x4 grid with the same excuse. Why not? They're all "griddy" and they don't fit to your hands at all...... Oh wait. You get used to it, and they work as intended. Whoopsie.
The side grid on that mouse works similarly. While many complain that 7-12 keys are harder to reach, they're not even close to impossible, and as the writer of this article stated, I also place non-vital buttons on the bottom row, with the mount button on my 8 key. And after about 6 months of active use, I've come to use the mouse as an extension of my own hand; I will not play on a regular mouse ever again.
But back to your post.... Seriously. Others might be being nice to you and all, but frankly... You sound like a fool who chose to be ignorant.
Paradoxx Feb 18th 2011 7:10AM
@SR
I even said "To each his own though." Frankly I don't care if people don't agree. Its an opinion, that's kinda how they work. But people are lame enough to downvote a perfectly reasonable opinion on a friggin computer mouse? And then OTHER losers are lame enough to actually get all uppity about it...
Its a mouse... get a life.
SR Feb 18th 2011 7:21AM
First of all, your reasoning is piss-poor, by pointing out that somehow a grid is a thoughtless and lazy way of arranging a mouse, when you've obviously never used this particular mouse in question, or even compared it to other grid-styled input instruments we use in our everyday lives. According to your reasoning and logic, people who can use the numpad on the keyboard without looking is either strange or a genius.
Second, just because YOU cannot see your own faulty logic and proceed to insult a perfectly functional and ergonomic design, you go on to insult others by calling them losers and telling them to get a life, simply because some people in this site that has witnessed your post thought it rhetoric to explain to a closed-minded individual who would make such absurd, uneducated, immature AND prejudiced opinion, like I am doing now.
Oh. And if you're going to call others tools and they play WoW too much and that they have pathetic lives.... Please do something about your grammar and spelling. It's about as pathetic as you describe the individuals who opposes your opinion.
People like this never ceases to amaze me.
Forreststump Feb 18th 2011 9:21AM
Obvious troll is obvious... and successful.
SR Feb 18th 2011 8:06PM
Trolls would usually disengage from the conversation after posting a controversial comment, or would actually fight the argument. A successful troll is a person who has successfully started a shitstorm and left before he was targeted by the wrath of very angry nerds, or have actually come to shove an incorrect statement down the opponent's throat, OR disengage while yelling "LOLOLOLOLOLOLOL" at the top of his lungs.
Perhaps our definition of "troll" and "idiots" is very similar. And frankly, if he was intending to waste someone's time.... Let's just say that I have a lot of time for things like these.
sullyXXX Feb 17th 2011 7:20PM
I must say, this is a game-changing peripheral, and I don't know how I'll carry on without it when I am forced to on one sad day. I really didn't think it would make such a difference, but trust me- it does. I also didn't find too much of a learning curve, being of the mobile phone generation - it's just like texting! Granted, My hands are damn near wider than they are long, but I'm a special case xD
Daedalus4096 Feb 17th 2011 7:23PM
If you're a Grid+Clique healer thinking about getting one of these, don't. There's no support for click-casting or mouseover-casting unless you specifically create macro to do so for each and every button. I don't know about you, but I use my limited macro slots for things other than prepending "[@mouseover]" to every single spell on my bar. Some of the other healer raid frames may work better with the Naga, but not those.
Prissa Feb 17th 2011 8:44PM
This was my issue. I bought a naga, tried it and ended up putting it on the floor next to my desk in utter frustration. "Why can't it be just another damn mouse button!?" I use healbot myself. But the only way I could seem to get it to work was by creating a new macro and keybind for my regular bars and then tie it to healbot that way. I admit this is a while ago and a lot of updates have happened since. But I didn't have to do that with my logitech mouse? I just plugged it in and the extra buttons were recognised easily. I'm not the most tech savvy person in the world and just trying to set up the naga with healbot felt like a losing battle.
Erik Feb 17th 2011 9:42PM
I agree that if you want to bind the side keys to mouseover type macros, that would be a pain. But, I'm a huge fan of Grid+Clique and the Naga. The solution is pretty simple: put things on the Naga side buttons that you don't need to use via mouseover.
As a shaman, I use Wind Shear, Water Shield, Earthliving Weapon, Totem sets, Mana Tide, Mana Pots, etc. Frees up a lot of out of the way, hard to hit keybinds and puts them right at your mouse thumb, which for me was otherwise being unused.
Zevyth Feb 18th 2011 3:02PM
I heal with this mouse using vuhdo. All my heals are bound to the num pad buttons and act as mouseover macros. You don't need to write macros for each button with this set-up. You just go into your key-bindings and arrange them so the number pad is bound to the vuhdo key listing. I'm not in front of my computer so it's a hard to explain. It's a very simple process though and can be done through the vuhdo ui.
For my dps/tank alts I have it set up with bartender. I don't use mouse over macros for these classes. I can set it up so that the number pad on the mouse triggers cds and other spells that target myself.
Nidaba Feb 18th 2011 1:09AM
The addon BindPad completely fixes this problem. You make the [@mouseover] macros in the BindPad interface, bind them (I chose to bind them to the NumPad), close the interface, and there you go - hidden keybinds that work with the Naga and don't take up macro space. I still use Clique to bind Left/Right/Middle click when using Grid.
The addon is tiny and easy to use. I would recommend a Naga to any healer. It was a godsend to my priest with her 72million (or thereabouts!) spells.
CodeMunki Feb 18th 2011 8:23AM
You're right. If you want to hit a number key on the mouse to trigger a click heal with Grid/Vuhdo/Healbot. Honestly, it never occurred to me to try that. :)
Thinking about it, I'd only need 6ish character-specific macros to heal like that on my Holy Pally. Not too bad considering right now I have only one macro for that character: beacon mouseover. I used to have two before they removed Sacred Shield.
I use Vuhdo and use the modifier keys to select heals like I did before the Naga. I use the Naga buttons to do things I normally would have used number keys for. I've been healing with a Naga since the original one shipped and don't plan on going back.
Gukojon Feb 17th 2011 7:24PM
Do want
Andrew Feb 17th 2011 7:26PM
I did mis-click a Heroic Leap and die on the Blackwing Descent elevator -- hardly the Naga's fault, though, as I am generally considered an idiot with WoW elevators.
That damn elevator has claimed more deaths in my raid than the bosses have.
Avengleyne Feb 17th 2011 8:48PM
Yea side mouse-buttons have me accidently levitating Paladins who think that Bubbling means they dont have to wait.
Eohnavi Feb 17th 2011 7:27PM
I've really been entertaining the idea of getting this mouse as I already have the WoW mouse but was terribly unimpressed by the simple wear and tear after a mere month. I would probably just get the regular or the special edition due to price however.
BigBadGooz Feb 17th 2011 9:27PM
going on almost 2 years with my naga no problems to report lites still work.
Tanth Feb 17th 2011 7:30PM
I seriously doubted that the Naga could be as useful as some people made it out to be, as a complete 12 button numpad on the side of a mouse seemed anything but natural. But, a guildy of mine purchased one and raved about it, so I decided to pick one up about a month ago sith some spare cash I had.
Best decision I've ever made.
While the numpad does take some getting used to, once you get used to it, I don't think you could ever go back. It just makes things go MUCH more smoothly and hitting the keys on a keyboard. My main is a Hunter, and it makes my rotation so easy, and it makes tanking on my Pally alt a dream. If your on the fence about getting one, I cant recommend it enough.