| Key | Default CS2 Mapping | Why it works | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | K1 | (Undo) | CS2 has single undo; this reduces wrist movement. | | K2 | B (Brush) | Instant access without keyboard. | | K3 | E (Eraser) | Toggle between brush/eraser. | | K4 | Ctrl++ (Zoom In) | CS2’s zoom is clunky; this smooths it. | | K5 | Space (Hand tool) | Temporarily pan. | | K6 | Ctrl+S (Save) | Paranoia save. |
Enter the unsung hero of the legacy hardware world: .
If you search for the phrase "Anurag 10 Pro for Adobe Photoshop CS2 better," you are likely a designer frustrated with lag, tiny UI elements, or driver conflicts. You want to know if a specific tablet can breathe new life into old software. The answer is a resounding —but only if you know how to configure it.
By pairing the Anurag 10 Pro with Adobe Photoshop CS2, you are not downgrading. You are optimizing. You are stripping away the bloat of modern software to focus on pure, pixel-level creation.
Have you tried the Anurag 10 Pro with other legacy software like CorelDRAW 12 or Macromedia FreeHand? Let us know in the comments below.
This is critical because CS2’s zoom slider is tiny. Removing touch forces you to use the pen or keyboard—which is exactly how CS2 was designed to be used. The 6 keys on the Anurag 10 Pro are membrane-style with long travel (feels like a 2005 keyboard). You can map them to CS2’s legacy shortcuts:
In an era where Adobe has moved entirely to a subscription-based Creative Cloud model, a quiet but passionate revolution is taking place in the corners of the digital art community. Professionals and hobbyists alike are rediscovering the lightweight charm of (released in 2005). But there is a catch: running a 17-year-old software on modern 4K displays and Windows 10/11 is a nightmare.