Hey guys,
For about the last 2 months or so I've been getting a strange issue with my mouse cursor where it feels very inaccurate/jittery, almost as if it is on ice or something. I spend a lot of time on games, namely Dota 2 and CS:GO and it drastically effects my performance to the point where I cannot really play at all.
It's really starting to bother me as I cannot determine what the issue would be and have tried multiple things to troubleshoot it. It occurs both on the desktop and in-game, but in-game is where I feel it most as accuracy is a lot more valuable there (lol). When I say slippery, it's not to the point where it's completely sliding all over the screen, but it is enough for me to be unable to play games properly.
So far I have
-Used multiple mice on my computer and they all experience the same issue, I have also used the mice on a different computer and do NOT experience the issue. Also tried different mouse pads with no results.
-Messed around with DPI and mouse acceleration, and every other mouse setting there is in windows 10
-Reinstalled GPU and mouse drivers, and kept them updated
-Disabled Game DVR and Xbox application in windows 10
Then about a month ago I bought new parts for my PC (I was due to upgrade it) everything EXCEPT a new GPU and monitor. After this I still experience the issue.
This is my current set up:
-Mobo: Asus Z270G Gaming Motherboard
-CPU: Intel core i7-7700
-Memory: Corsair vengeance 16gb ddr4 2x8 2400mhz RAM
-PSU: Seasonic X-650
-GPU: Nvidia GTX 970
-Mouse: Steelseries Sensei 310
-Mousepad: Steelseries QcK+
-Monitor: Samsung S24D390 60Hz
I plan on upgrading my GPU and monitor within the next 2 weeks to possibly a 1070/1080 and a 1080p 144hz monitor. I am not sure however that this will fix the issue?
I was wondering if anyone knew anything that could possibly have this effect on the mouse cursor for both hardware and software? I have found very little information on it online, but came across one thread that mentioned it could maybe be due to electricity (as in grounding/popwerpoint etc). Would love to hear what you guys think!
Thanks~
For about the last 2 months or so I've been getting a strange issue with my mouse cursor where it feels very inaccurate/jittery, almost as if it is on ice or something. I spend a lot of time on games, namely Dota 2 and CS:GO and it drastically effects my performance to the point where I cannot really play at all.
It's really starting to bother me as I cannot determine what the issue would be and have tried multiple things to troubleshoot it. It occurs both on the desktop and in-game, but in-game is where I feel it most as accuracy is a lot more valuable there (lol). When I say slippery, it's not to the point where it's completely sliding all over the screen, but it is enough for me to be unable to play games properly.
So far I have
-Used multiple mice on my computer and they all experience the same issue, I have also used the mice on a different computer and do NOT experience the issue. Also tried different mouse pads with no results.
-Messed around with DPI and mouse acceleration, and every other mouse setting there is in windows 10
-Reinstalled GPU and mouse drivers, and kept them updated
-Disabled Game DVR and Xbox application in windows 10
Then about a month ago I bought new parts for my PC (I was due to upgrade it) everything EXCEPT a new GPU and monitor. After this I still experience the issue.
This is my current set up:
-Mobo: Asus Z270G Gaming Motherboard
-CPU: Intel core i7-7700
-Memory: Corsair vengeance 16gb ddr4 2x8 2400mhz RAM
-PSU: Seasonic X-650
-GPU: Nvidia GTX 970
-Mouse: Steelseries Sensei 310
-Mousepad: Steelseries QcK+
-Monitor: Samsung S24D390 60Hz
I plan on upgrading my GPU and monitor within the next 2 weeks to possibly a 1070/1080 and a 1080p 144hz monitor. I am not sure however that this will fix the issue?
I was wondering if anyone knew anything that could possibly have this effect on the mouse cursor for both hardware and software? I have found very little information on it online, but came across one thread that mentioned it could maybe be due to electricity (as in grounding/popwerpoint etc). Would love to hear what you guys think!
Thanks~