Bloody Gaming Pc

0 views
Skip to first unread message

Agenor Ramadan

unread,
Aug 3, 2024, 5:20:02 PM8/3/24
to broodsummaivers

Bound By Innovation" Featuring some of the most advanced and innovative technology in the space, including Light Strike (LK) optical key switches for the world's fastest response times, Bloody Gaming peripherals promises to provide gamers with the competitive edge they seek.

We are not just a peripheral company, we are the lifeblood of the community - One-Stop-Shop for gaming + innovation. We are not pushovers, we continue to fight for the progress of Innovation and Growth - Willing to challenge and push barriers.

Bloody Gaming's Return Policies: We strive to provide the best service, for Items shipped from us can be returned within 30 days of receipt of shipment in most cases. Some products have different policies or requirements associated with them. Please reach out to us through Email to obtain more information.

*Disclaimer* Domestic United States shipping is an estimated timeframe based on when the order is received. Couriers do not include weekends in the estimated delivery. The cut-off time for orders to be processed and shipped out is 11 am PST each day. Orders that are received after the timeframe may be processed but shipped out the following day.

*Disclaimer* International shipping may incur tariff or customs fees by region - be sure to verify any additional import fees by your region. Bloody Gaming is not liable for any tariffs incurred in your region.

*COVID-19 NOTICE due to the current environment with the COVID-19 virus, shipments are taking longer to reach their destinations. The shipping carriers are working hard to meet their commitments, but shipments may be delayed. Specifically, shipments with International destinations can take additional weeks for completed deliveries.

*EU 2021 VAT PolicyStarting July 2021, all 27 state members of EU are required to charge VAT on all shipments, coming from outside the EU, disregarding the value. Please expect delays for countries that did not already do this. Please also check your local post if packages are being held due to the new VAT payment policy

I couldn't really find any info on this and not sure if I should annoy support with this. I recently got a Bloody gaming mouse mostly because it looked so dang cool and downloaded the software to see if I can do some interesting things with the buttons. It has a bunch of macro functions and whatnot and a bunch of ridiculous setting that half of it I don't even understand. ? When I tried looking up tutorials and stuff I ended up in a bunch of cheating focused forums and that got me super worried. Is it cheating? Should I be worried when I'm running the software while playing? The only feature that I really liked that you can get the mouse sensitivity very low to help with aiming with a button press, but you still have to aim for yourself so dunno. Should I just delete it and forget about the shiny functions?

it should be chill unless your just getting it to do functions of the game for you. for example, i mapped WASD to the side buttons on my mouse, so i can play one handed when i broke my arm. id say remapping buttons and changing sensitivity is fine, just dont do anything that seems like it would get you banned

You are allowed to use macros as long as they don't play the game for you, a good chunk of people have macros for spamming melee and semi auto guns or recasting abilities, so as long as you're still playing the game I wouldn't worry about it. you can read DE's official stance on macros and such here

DE draws the (somewhat unspecific) line by what you already can do in the game. So, if you need to press two buttons to do something it is probably ok to use a macro that allows you to do this with one button press (instead of two). In other words, a macro that sends two keyboard codes from a single key press.

However, automating button presses, like using an "on-off" function for your melee key, can definitively lead to banning. That is because such a "melee on" (and "melee off") function doesn't exist in the game. The same is true for an automated "afk-dance", where you have a macro sending recorded/coded movement to the game in order to avoid the built-in afk-check kicking in. There is no official line or statistics on how many and what happens if you are caught, but there is a general misconception that this is ok just because someone gets away with it. I would never risk it myself, since players have been banned for such "on-off" automation.

If you use any software that reads something from the screen (memory) and automatically adjusts the mouse accordingly, you will be banned. My guess would be even perma-banned (to 2035, or whatever it currently is).

I have a macro mouse but honestly I don't feel like macros are necessary and I would probably advise against using them in-game just in case. Remapping buttons is fine though as it is no different to remapping keyboard controls. I have buttons 1-4 mapped to my thumb buttons and 5 mapped to my scroll wheel. My Logitech software is always running and has been for about 3 years or so.

No real need for macros automating the game, and definitely not work the risk. Automating stuff would be cool from a nerdy-tech challenge viewpoint, but if one is not prepared to actually play the game, why bother with something that is considered cheating?

A third tenkeyless gaming keyboard in a week? Well, I never. This time, it's Bloody Gaming's B930, which uses optical RGB switches not unlike the Razer Huntsman for even nippier keystrokes and reduced latency. Unfortunately, Razer's Huntsman could probably scoff the B930 down in a single gulp, for this is definitely not best gaming keyboard material.

I'll be upfront, the Bloody Gaming B930 really wasn't my cup of tea. Considering it costs 130 / $140, I was really expecting a much higher level of build quality than what arrived on my testing bench. Made almost entirely from plastic, the silver trim and exterior corner screws just look a bit tacky and try-hard if you ask me, and the flared corners coupled with a different coloured RGB on every single row of the keyboard just made me grimace every time I looked at it.

Even worse, this keyboard is so rattly! Each and every keycap wobbles from side to side as you move your fingers over them, and the space bar emits a worrying mechanical whine every time it bounces up and down - so much so that I can always hear it over the rest of its CLACKY CLACKs. It feels like it's going to break every time I use it, like pressing down too hard will suddenly dislodge something, and it makes me long for the infinitely better built (not to mention a third of the price) Tecware Phantom RGB I reviewed last week.

To its credit, the B390 isn't actually that bad to type on. The keys themselves are well-spaced and I was able to get up to full typing speed almost instantly. I rarely found myself making any mistakes and there was enough tactile feedback to make writing long word documents on it (including this review) an absolute breeze.

Likewise, contrary to the amount of wobble going on, each key cap is, in fact, quite firmly attached to its respective switch. The B390 comes with eight replacement caps for the WASD and ERFG keys, for example, and when I tried to remove them with the bundled key cap puller, I had quite a tough time actually getting any of them off. I suspect a large part of that might actually be down to the rather ineffectual design of said key cap puller, as the close spacing between the keys didn't really leave a lot of room to get in underneath them, but it's clear they're not going to suddenly fall off after a prolonged typing session.

Bizarrely, the Light Strike Libra switches used by the B930 have a completely different colour scheme to your usual crop of Cherry MX switches, so the brown ones on my review sample are actually described as being 'linear and smooth', while the orange version is 'tactile and clicky'. Generally, brown switches are often the tactile, clicky types, offering a little bump about halfway down a key press to enhance the sensation of tactile feedback, but not here. Instead, these brown switches go straight up and down like your typical Cherry MX red switch.

Only here, Bloody's Libra switches claim a maximum latency of 0.2ms compared to Cherry's 30ms, technically making them a lot quicker and faster for playing games. They also claim a 100 million keystroke lifespan over Cherry's 60 million, as well as water resistance and reinforced stabilisation. That may well be true, but the thing is I just don't believe it - not when the keys make such a racket and jiggle about so easily at the merest brush of a finger.

The B390 also doesn't come with any of the features I'd expect from such an expensive keyboard, either. There's no USB passthrough, for instance, and the interface of its Key Dominator software is so archaic that I found it almost impossible to use, whether it was changing the layout, recording macros or adjusting the RGB lighting.

Plus, why spend 130 / $140 on a keyboard like this, where you're constantly worrying about the state and sound of its keys, when you could spend the same amount of money on the infinitely superior Roccat Vulcan? There's just no reason to pick the Bloody B390 when the Vulcan or even the cheaper Fnatic Streak exists (the latter of which is also available as the tenkeyless miniStreak for just 90 / $90), so do yourself a favour and get one of those instead. You'll thank yourself for it later.

A4Tech Co., Ltd. is a Taiwanese computer hardware and electronics company headquartered in New Taipei, Taiwan. A4Tech Co., Ltd. was founded in 1987 by Robert Cheng.[2] The first activity of the company was the production of computer mice. In the future, the range of products was replenished with other types of computer peripherals.

c80f0f1006
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages