Like many esports mice, the Glorious D treats simplicity as a virtue. It's a simple six-button wired mouse, with two main clickers, a scroll wheel, and a DPI-switching button in its center column. On the side are two macro buttons. There's also a color-coded DPI preset indicator on the underside of the mouse that you can check from time to time if you switch resolutions often, though it's not an input. What you see is what you get. The Model D is also relatively basic on the inside. It employs a Pixart PMW-3360 sensor, and tracks accurately at up to 12,000dpi and 250 inches per second. Such a rating is about average for a $50 mouse, even from a major manufacturer. It's also, in my experience, as much speed as you need. Anecdotally, I can say the Glorious stayed on track while playing games like Call of Duty: Modern Warfare, which requires bursts of many quick movements. Pro players might disagree, but for most people it will get the job done. As I've said on many occasions, esports...