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GM2 Action Pad and Game Mouse
Score: 100%
Developer: Saitek
Device Type: Controller


Function:

The Saitek GM2 is an ?Action Pad and Game Mouse.? It plugs into your USB port and gives you unequalled command over first person shooters and third person shooters. There are two basic units that comprise the Saitek GM2. The more mundane of the two is a stylish gaming mouse which has pretty good response. It features a hat switch on the side, as well as the (expected) left, right, and scroll buttons. This mouse can be used instead of your mouse, or alternating with your mouse, as it plugs into the action pad unit. This allows your old mouse to stay right where it is. The Action Pad unit provides a comfy host of seven buttons (six plus a ?Shift? button), a thumb controlled rudder wheel, and an eight-way hat switch. The controls on this unit are easy to reach, easy to get used to, comfortable, and, when combined with the included Saitek ?Gaming Extensions? software, is utterly, and completely programmable.

Performance:

In order to put the GM2 to a test, I tried it with EverQuest. Anyone familiar with EverQuest knows that Verant has programmed is so that it is ornery. What does that mean? Well, in the case of hardware, it means that it doesn?t support ANY joystick, is designed to be used with a keyboard and mouse only, and basically uses your computer as a dumb terminal/rendering engine while you?re playing. It doesn?t like multitasking and it?s impossible to ?Alt-Tab? out and return.

At any rate, if a controller can work with EverQuest, it can work with just about any game. I had to fiddle around with the Saitek ?G.E.? software a bit and had to activate the configuration before launching EverQuest, but what I got was crisp response and added control which allowed me to keep my focus on the game and not the keyboard. I could initiate, fight and end battles, and then collect any loot items and continue on without EVER touching the keyboard. The GM2 single-handedly changed my gameplay from a maximum of two minutes without using the keyboard to a routine 15 minutes without needing the keyboard. Essentially, the only time I had any reason to use the keyboard was for communicating with other characters in depth. (Even some exchanges could be handled with the GM2?s Action Pad by saving text in the game?s macros and programming the pad?s buttons to those macros. The difference was unbelievable.

The GM2 Action Pad is a unique controller. It provides a ?rest? for your left palm and places a slew of controls within easy reach. Although it is unlike any other types of controllers, this ?ergonomic? layout makes for a short, easy learning period. Learning to use the Saitek ?Gaming Extensions? software to program the GM2 takes a little more playing around with it to get it down, but in both cases, the advantages FAR outweigh the effort required.

Software:
The GM2 is one of Saitek?s controllers that works with their new Saitek ?Gaming Extensions? software. These ?Extensions? allow you to completely program every aspect of the GM2 and save the configuration for different games in a file. In addition, Saitek ?G.E.? can be set to automatically detect when you start a game and turn on the appropriate configuration file.

As for the actual process of programming the controller configuration itself, the gaming extensions are accessed as a ?special folder? in Windows 98. This folder has a directory tree on the left hand side and has a large right hand side field which is used to display a 3D model of the controller(s). Choosing a button, switch, or throttle to program is as easy as clicking on the appropriate button on the model of the controller and then changing its assignment. Can?t see the button very well? No problem! The 3D model is ACTUALLY a 3D model and can be spun around to allow access to any part of the controller. Does it work? Yes. Well? Extremely well.


Features:
  • Mouse
  • Hat switch
  • Two buttons
  • Scroll wheel
  • Plugs through Action Pad (Shares USB)
  • Rudder-type analog control
  • Six programmable buttons
  • Shift button (Allows up to 40 programmable commands)
  • Eight-way hat switch
  • USB connection

Drawbacks & Problems::

The product is great. The software is revolutionary. The system is designed to work, even if the game is not extremely anxious to be used with a controller. The only real drawback is in the requirements. If you don?t meet them, you can?t use it. You NEED USB. You have to have Windows 98. If you don?t have at least a Pentium class machine, you?re not playing games, right?

If you meet these requirements and you play games, especially first person games or third person games, you need the GM2 Action Pad and Gaming Mouse. This goes doubly if you hate attempting to use a keyboard to play a game. Die-hard gamers that already have a Razer BoomSlang 2000 may wish to use it with the Action Pad, for the best of both worlds. If you do, don?t let the speed in which you lose friends and get banned from online competitions surprise you...


-Geck0, GameVortex Communications
AKA Robert Perkins
Minimum System Requirements:

Pentium class PC with a minimum of 32MB of RAM, Windows 98 REQUIRED, USB port
  Test System:

Intel Celeron 500, 64MB Ram, 44X CD-ROM, 10 GB HD

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