While browsing the web and looking at documents, I found myself tilting the wheel to scroll up and down pages instead of rolling it. The tilt function feels great in action, both for everyday use and in gaming. So where do the last two "buttons" come from? The scroll wheel on the Basilisk got a little hop-up: In addition to the usual scroll-wheel down-click, you can now tilt the scroll wheel to the left or right. Also, as on the other Basilisks, a dial on the underside lets you tune the scroll wheel's sensitivity, which keeps you out of system settings if you like to tweak that parameter often. Last, underneath the mouse is a button that cycles quickly among the Basilisk's five onboard profiles without making you open Synapse, Razer's configuration software. On the side, you have two macro/shortcut buttons and a detachable FPS-minded "sniper" paddle that, by default, drops your tracking resolution to low sensitivity for precise clicking. On top, you have the usual two main clickers, a scroll wheel that clicks, and two resolution-swapping buttons. It's technically an 11-button, right-handed model, though it has only nine customizable buttons. The Basilisk Ultimate's core look and feel remain mostly unchanged from the original. Best Hosted Endpoint Protection and Security SoftwareÄon't Mean a Thing If It Ain't Got That Wing.