Conclusion

The Cougar 600K mechanical keyboard left us with very mixed feelings. It is more than just visually similar to the more advanced 700K, retaining every bit of the exceptional quality we encountered while testing Cougar's most advanced keyboard. The aluminum plate both increases the structural integrity of the keyboard and it adds toward a stylish aesthetic appearance. The Cherry MX keys are, as with all of the keyboards that we tested to this date, very stable and consistent. There is virtually no key wobbling or any feeling of ricketiness about the keyboard, including the flat keys across the top.

On the other hand, the Cougar 600K has been stripped of essentially all of the functionality features of the 700K, going way beyond the missing macro keys. It lacks any programmability options, reducing it to a simple, typical 104 key keyboard and a few pre-programmed macro keys. Meanwhile the selective backlighting behind just eight keys appears strange and lacks any true functionality. Even gamers that actually use just these particular keys are just a fraction of the whole gaming community.

The major issue here is that despite all those functionality reductions, the retail price of the Cougar 600K significantly lower than the full-featured 700K. With a retail price of $130 including shipping, the Cougar 600K is directly competing with its more advanced sibling, which is retailing for just $20 more. I expect that very few users will want to give up the full board backlighting, the ability to reprogram any key to perform any desired function and the creation of multiple layout profiles just to save $20, even if these features seem virtually useless to them at the time of the purchase.

On the other hand, the Cougar 600M is an entirely different story that, depending on your preferred grip, is somewhere between a success story and the same tragic ending as the 600K. Where the 600K kept the appearance and ditched every advanced feature of the 700K, the 600M does the exact opposite, ditching the design and frame of the 700M while maintaining most of the functionality and all advanced features. It is a very well made product, it feels great inside a palm and is very comfortable for long-term usage. We found it to be just as versatile and accurate as any advanced gaming mouse, without any performance or quality issues.

The catch - if not outright flaw - of the 600M is its design, which in favoring palm grip users also hinders claw grip users. At a personal level, as someone who is accustomed to a claw grip, the 600M feels far too lightweight, strangely shaped, and the 45° button is very difficult to use. This lack of "universality" reduces the potential buyers of the 600M.

However the bigger issue is that even for palm grip users who would be right at home on the 600M, the pricing of Cougar's mice is in an odd place right now..The Cougar 600M is currently retailing for $55 + $6.7 shipping, which is not an especially high retail price for a good gaming mouse. But with the company's best mouse - the significantly better Cougar 700M - retailing for $60 including shipping, the 600M is not a cheaper alternative in any way. At best it's a lateral, offering a mouse with similar functionality to the 700M in a different design for roughly the same price. Ultimately this pricing robs the 600M of any real niche of its own and makes it hard to recommend the mouse over what I feel is the superior 700M, even if we neglect the existence of half a dozen products from competitive companies.

The Cougar 600M Gaming Mouse
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  • Chaser - Saturday, June 20, 2015 - link

    Thank you for sharing with us your soliloquy of other keyboards and mice but at the end saying nothing of the product and tropic of the topic.
  • meacupla - Sunday, June 21, 2015 - link

    Yeah, I gave a list of what I hate about other mice from major players, or what I think spoils the experience with them.

    The main reason for considering smaller players is because the major players are not offering a good product, so I said I'll try Cougar out, didn't I?

    Why or how do you expect anyone who is reading a review to already have the product being reviewed already, when the main reason to read the review, in the first place, is to make an informed purchasing decision?
  • DanNeely - Friday, June 19, 2015 - link

    I'm not an FPS gamer (and as someone who mouses left handed often end up doing extensive changes to default keyboard layouts if I need to keep a hand on the mouse anyway); but my immediate to WASD vs ESDF is To-MAY-to To-MAH-to. Can someone fill me in on why this is actually relevant?
  • SilthDraeth - Friday, June 19, 2015 - link

    Wasd vs esdf gives your fps left hand pinky better access to additional hotkeys that are not such a reach, etc.
  • toyotabedzrock - Friday, June 19, 2015 - link

    It's hard to find a decent wired keyboard yet there is still this mechanical obsession.
  • meacupla - Friday, June 19, 2015 - link

    I don't understand how it's "hard" to find a decent wired keyboard.
    There are, literally, thousands of them out there, mechanical or otherwise.
  • Mr Perfect - Friday, June 19, 2015 - link

    I'm glad to see that they didn't remove any standard keys in order to add new ones. So many manufacturers do that, it becomes almost impossible to find a board with all the normal keys on it.

    BTW, what's the spacing on the first row? It looks like the left side CTRL/Win/Alt are larger then normal. Is the spacebar smaller? That would make it almost impossible to put aftermarket caps on there.
  • Inteli - Sunday, June 21, 2015 - link

    It certainly looks that way. By my rather crude estimates, the spacebar looks like 5.5x as wide as a normal key, which is significantly shorter than a typical 6.25x spacebar. Now, a lot of keyboards also use 6x spacebar (Black widow, G710+, etc), so anti-aftermarket boards aren't uncommon.
  • Yorgos - Friday, June 19, 2015 - link

    "Eight programmable buttons"
    Many companies do NOT define what programmable buttons actually are on their product.
    E.G.: programmable is the keys/buttons from my g700 mouse, it means that I program them to behave in a certain way.(I do not need to have any s/w to use my mouse. )
    All razer products on the other hand, programmable mean the software definition of a key stroke on their product. That is not programmable, it's just software redifinable (if I can stretch english a bit).
    So, does this keyboard have programmable keys, or software redifinable keys?
    (sorry if I missed it in the article)
  • thebadgeroverlord - Sunday, June 21, 2015 - link

    Is there any advantage of being able to switch between six-key and n-key rollover modes? I would have thought that n-key, by its' very nature, is superior, so there wouldn't be any point in six-key rollover. Apologies if I'm being ignorant by the way.

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