These options can be applied to the left or right button, changing their default, run-of-the-mill mouse settings. In addition to the gaming features, customers can also assign browser commands, content commands (like Copy, Paste, Delete etc), key commands, open Flip 3D or Instant Viewer, use Digital Ink in PowerPoint, assign macros and more. These options are actually part of Microsoft's app, and not specifically a feature of this particular mouse. Regardless, the included gaming commands consist of a Precision Booster for adjusting the pointer speed (like slowing it down for sniping off a few heads), a Gaming Toggle for recording and playing up to two favorite key sequences while in-game (which helps with repetitive tasks and sequences that are long or difficult to run), and Quick Turn for spinning your character to face in the opposite direction.
PC gamers with a taste for first-person shooters will need to look elsewhere given its overall physical size and limited buttons. But let's stop right there for a second: this is not a gaming mouse unless you're playing something like Diablo 3 or Guild Wars 2. Actually the customization options are rather insane, and even includes commands for gamers. The Wedge Touch Mouse performs like any other mouse out of the box, but it can be customized in Microsoft Mouse and Keyboard Center. This takes some getting used to, especially when you've used a mouse wheel for years. That said, the mouse offers two swiping modes: slow and fast, depending on your viewing and browsing needs.
But there's a catch: swipe too fast, and all the pictures roll by as if they're trying to make a motion picture.
As another example, the mouse makes scrolling through images easy: just swipe a finger left and right to move forward and backward in Windows Photo Viewer.