

The Torq X10 has three LED areas – the scroll wheel, DPI indicators and logo – but annoyingly only two are programmable the DPI indicators are always solid red. There's also a tab for the LED functionality. A DPI slider with 100 DPI increments from 200 DPI to 8,200 DPI and a sensitivity slider with levels 1-10 are also both accessible at any time for quick tuning of the current DPI level and the global Windows sensitivity setting, and likewise the basic LED settings are readily available from any screen. On any screen of the software, the active profile is shown in the bottom left corner and the button there can be used to quickly flick between any installed profile. The Torq X10 has 512KB of onboard non-volatile memory, enough to store five profiles directly on the mouse. We know from our time with EVGA at Computex that the company is working on a gaming keyboard, so it seems Unleash will be used as a central hub for all of its future peripherals. Interestingly, under the Input Device heading, the software has a keyboard option, currently greyed out. Then again, this is the same company that published the Precision X GPU tuning software, so it might not come as much of a surprise. Software and PerformanceThe EVGA Unleash software is currently Windows only, but we're very impressed by how well laid-out, intuitive and slick it is as a whole for the company's first piece of peripheral software – it puts certain the veterans of the game to shame.
