PC accessory maker Razer is going deep into its catalog and resurrecting its first gaming mouse, the Boomslang.
The company is releasing a special edition version of the Boomslang to celebrate Razer’s 20th anniversary, which promises to provide a hit of PC gaming nostalgia.
The Boomslang arrived in 1999, when Razer was owned by kärna. At the time, Razer’s current CEO, Min-Liang Tan, served as an advisor and contributed to the creation of Boomslang.
“Razer started as a side project of sorts amongst a collection of hardcore PC gamers and friends who were looking for a competitive edge,” Tan told us in a 2014 interview. “One of us had an idea to create a mouse designed specifically for gaming, and the outcome was the Razer Boomslang. We quickly realized the potential of a full line of dedicated gaming peripheral products.”
Although kärna shut down in 2000 during the dot-com bubble, Tan bought the Razer brand back in 2005. Boomslang models are now resold on eBay for around $200 or more.
Razer has revived the product with a modern version that includes all the features you’d expect in a cutting-edge gaming mouse. The 20th anniversary model preserves the Boomslang’s original shape while refining it with “modern engineering, materials, and a premium finish,” the company says. The new version also drops the mouse ball for an optical sensor.
(Credit: Razer)
Other features include Razer’s RGB lighting, up to 45,000 DPI with 99.8% resolution accuracy, along with a “100-million-click lifespan for enduring reliability.” The cordless mouse can also recharge through the included Razer Mouse Dock Pro, which uses magnetic wireless charging.
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However, the company is only releasing 1,337 units worldwide, an old-school reference to 1337 or Leet, which stands for hacker speak. Razer hasn’t said how much the product will cost or when it will be released. But its website includes a sign-up page to learn more about the launch.
This is not the first time Razer has revived the Boomslang. Back in 2011, the company also re-released the product as a collector’s item.
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