Cloth or Hard pad?
The surface beneath your mouse determines more than you think. I've watched competitive players miss clutch shots because their pad couldn't keep up, and seen office workers replace cheap cloth mats every three months when the edges fray into fuzz. The cloth versus hard pad debate isn't about brand loyalty—it's about understanding what your hand actually does for eight hours straight.
What Cloth Actually Gives You
Cloth pads absorb impact. That slight compression when you slam the mouse down for a flick shot? It stabilizes your landing. The woven surface creates microscopic resistance that high-DPI players unconsciously depend on for micro-adjustments. Glorious and Razer have built entire product lines around this tactile feedback, using tight weaves that maintain consistent glide even after thousands of hours of palm sweat and skin oils.
But cloth is porous. Coffee doesn't just sit on top—it seeps in. Pet hair embeds itself. After six months, that pristine black surface turns into a archaeological record of every snack you've eaten at your desk.
The Hard Truth About Hard Surfaces
Hard pads made from anodized aluminum or textured polycarbonate don't absorb anything. Spilled energy drink wipes clean in ten seconds. The Kratos model mentioned in our testing maintains identical glide characteristics from day one to year three because there's no fabric to compress or deform.
The trade-off? Noise. Every mouse movement becomes audible—fine in a private office, distracting in shared spaces. And low-sensitivity players who sweep their entire forearm across the pad will notice something cloth users never experience: temperature. Aluminum pulls heat from your palm in winter and reflects ambient warmth in summer. Some find this grounding; others call it unpleasant.
The Middle Ground Nobody Talks About
Hybrid pads attempt to bridge this gap—cloth surfaces bonded to rigid substrates. In practice, they usually inherit weaknesses from both categories: the surface still stains, and the edges still delaminate. Our testing found only two hybrid models worth considering, and both cost nearly double equivalent pure-cloth or hard alternatives.
Making the Actual Choice
Your sensitivity setting decides this more than your aesthetic preference. Low sensitivity (below 800 DPI) with large mouse sweats demands the uniform glide of hard surfaces. High sensitivity players making tiny wrist adjustments benefit from cloth's stopping power. Streaming setups leaning toward visual minimalism often prefer hard pads for their sharper silhouettes and easier maintenance between broadcasts.
There's no universal answer. There's only the wrong pad for your specific hand speed, cleaning habits, and acoustic environment.
Join Discussion
布垫手感确实稳,高DPI下微调舒服多了
之前用过铝垫,冬天那冰手感直接劝退,太难受了