Das Keyboards new gaming line, Division Zero, manages both, with some caveats.
Das sent us the Control version, and it works beautifully with other mice as well as the M50.
All in all, their prices are on par with other PC gaming peripherals: Pricey.
If youre rocking the keyboard and mouse that came with your PC, these arent for you.
If youre a mechanical keyboard enthusiast, well.
Youre definitely used to playing this much for a keyboard.
Thats exactly what I did, since my work and gaming are in the same physical place.
The M50 is a quality ambidextrous gaming mouse, which is nice to see.
In Windows, all you should probably do is pressFn + F12to enable macro recording.
I tested the linear switches.
The switches are great, but theyre not perfect.
However, ifyoure a Cherry MX lover and you love that audible click, youll miss it.
If you use the linear model and miss feeling the actuation point, youll miss that too.
(Which was especially nice, since the linear switches are similar to the MX Red.)
Where They Fall Short
Division Zero line has its strengths, but it also has weaknesses.
The LED backlighting is weak, and not just brightness-wise.
Plus, its not per-key backlighting, so keep that in mind.
The keyboards single USB 2.0 port and extra cables.
These drawbacks may be dealbreakers for some of youespecially the price.
Well, we can definitely recommend the 47W mousepad and the X40 keyboard.
The M50 is a little trickier to tell you to buy.
If you dont though, well, its an easy one to skip.
The X40 is a bigger deal though.
I liked it, enough to push over my Corsair K70 sometimes.
I like theideaof the changeable top plates, but Im also a sucker for customization like that.
However, the X40 is definitely missing things I miss from other keyboards.
And like the others here, its pricey.