[...] i hate mousemats i use my desk but there's a layer on it to make it smoooooth [...]
:-D
I've been using an Icemat 2nd Edition for several years now - truth be told I don't find it that awesome - it can get uncomfortably cold, you need to clean it regularly (ironic, considering it used to be mice you needed to clean before) and obviously you run the danger of shattering it... Actually I got it as a present and if it weren't for this fact I don't think I would care too much about "gaming surfaces" - to me it's all just marketing hype.
My mouse is a trusty IntelliMouse Explorer 3.0, now in its second incarnation - boy, am I glad that MS re-introduced this mouse series. All those new "gaming mice" are full of marketing bullshit or unnecessary features and don't really fit my hand.
I had a Razer Diamondback once and dudes, I tell you, it was the worst mouse I ever saw - I trust that Razer has made better mice since then but I swore to never ever touch a Razer product from then on.
Let me elaborate: the mouse had 7 buttons with mouse4 and 6 on the left side (thumb) and mouse5 and 7 on the other - for some reason the "awesome" Razer drivers didn't allow to rebind these keys which made e.g. using mouse4 and mouse5 as back and forward buttons in the browser an epic fail venture - also, many games didn't recognize mouse6 and 7 back in the day. I wrote to Razer support about it but they told me it was a "hardware design feature" and couldn't be changed. Funnily enough I installed the MS IntelliMouse drivers and my Razer Diamondback got recognized as an IntelliMouse Explorer WITH ALL THE KEYS WORKING PROPERLY and, that's the best part, mouse4 and mouse5 both on the left side - ha, ha, ha.
Next part - after around a month the rubber padding around the mouse started to wear off and became rough so it was quite unpleasant to hold the mouse...
Even more unpleasant was the fact that after several weeks my LMB started locking up, making the mouse pretty much unusable.
The "pièce de résistance" was the fact that I wanted to put some varnish over the Razer logo so that it doesn't rub off that quickly - I like my logos to be crisp and clear. ^^
However, it turned out that the Razer logo was actually DISSOLVED by my varnish - and mind you, it was a high-quality modeling varnish...
What a piece of garbage... Luckily I got it very cheaply from a friend who was playing in a clan sponsored by Razer...
Anyways - in my opinion you can buy pretty much any mouse that fits your hand well and anything that to you provides a smooth enough surface. Even cheap mice can be fine since you can replace them easily and they usually provide a similar performance to much more expensive mice that get sold on marketing hype - e.g. multiple sensors and impossibly high sensor resolutions, which don't do crap but look good in advertisements, because more sensors and higher dpi = automatically more precision, right? Wrong! -.-
It's all very similar to other pastimes that spawned a distinct culture around them - paintball, skiing/snowboarding, you name it. The amount of marketing bullshit surrounding many products is absolutely staggering - and they charge you for every conceivable made-up feature. :-\