why are there so many anime girl bgs thenPatatitta wrote:
if you're playing osu 90% chances you're gay
why are there so many anime girl bgs thenPatatitta wrote:
if you're playing osu 90% chances you're gay
PP farming is not considered "playing"z0z wrote:
why are there so many anime girl bgs thenPatatitta wrote:
if you're playing osu 90% chances you're gay
gatekeepin'Karmine wrote:
PP farming is not considered "playing"z0z wrote:
why are there so many anime girl bgs thenPatatitta wrote:
if you're playing osu 90% chances you're gay
Penguin wrote:
NEW KEYBOARD ALERT!! Bauer Lite w/ HMX Clouds (63.5g) and GMK DMG 3IT'S BEEN 3 YEARS AND WE'RE BACK WITH A BANGER!!!
LET'S FUCKING GO!
https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/737221082133692476/1267603240917270711/IMG_1265.jpg?ex=66a96303&is=66a81183&hm=69d803c9dc31a1ea9d46ae509ab3d35dc391333e61f8bd88534cedb776e9e95c&
I love it so much!
We're back baby.
I absolutely love "entry-level" injection molded keyboards, so when I found out that Omnitype finally released their Bauer Lite after all these years, I had to purchase one. I bought the bundle they have on their site which comes with a nice set of GMK keycaps. I have to say that I am very pleased. The entire process of ordering, unboxing and building was one of the BEST experiences I've had with this hobby.
The overall build experience was very pleasant. This board comes with a very nice instruction pamphlet that is easy to digest and understand. All the screws and hardware are separated into their own individual marked baggies, so it's virtually impossible to mix anything up. The tolerances on this keyboard are absolutely perfect. No warping or anything like that. The only complaint that I had was that it was a little hard to get the daughterboard cable set properly in the bottom case when trying to close everything up. It kept getting caught on the Zinc weight that I added to this build. VERY minor nitpick, which most people don't have to worry about because the zinc weight is an extra that a majority of people didn't purchase.
As for the keycaps, this is my first set of GMK keycaps and I absolutely adore them. They are very nice to the touch and the lettering is incredibly crisp and sharp. The colors are very bright and vivid. They produce a lot more of a higher pitched clackier sound profile compared to your run of the mill PBT keycaps. It pairs very nicely with the switches that I bought.
Speaking of the switches.. I've been out of the keyboard hobby for quite some time, so coming back and trying to learn which switch manufacturers are on the top of the game was a fairly daunting task. After a fair bit of researching, I decided to get a set of HMX Clouds. HMX are apparently some of the best factory lubed switches on the market right now, and I really did not want to spend hours upon hours of lubing, so it seemed like a no brainer. HMX is known for their "clacky" "poppy" and "bright" sound signature, and oh boy, that's exactly what they are. These are definitely my clackiest switches and I fricken love it maaaan. Most HMX switches are very light switches weighing in around 40g bottom out, but I ain't no bitch so I ordered the 63.5 gram versions.
The days of individually hand-lubing switches is long behind me now. I think the stock lube on these HMX switches are truly superb. I really don't see myself lubing switches anymore as long as I can purchase a set of HMX switches. It sounds and feels amazing. Plus, the tolerances are phenomenal. Almost NO stem wobble, no need to film them whatsoever.
This board didn't come with stabs, so I bought some Durock V2 screw-ins which work perfectly fine. I think they are probably the best stabs I've used to far. Very little modification to make them sound good. Just some lube and that's it.
I also purchased a 232g zinc weight that you can screw into the bottom of the case. I don't think it changes the sound signature too much, but it really adds a nice hefty feel to the board whenever you carry it. Definitely worth the extra little money I spent on it. Makes the board feel more "premium" overall. It also just looks cool.
It didn't come with a carrying case unfortunately, so I had to purchase a third-party case. I wish it came with one, but it's whatever.
Overall, this is probably my favorite keyboard I've built so far. :thumbsup:
I don't rate cheapo rubber domes anymore since I don't want to fill the rankings with too mundane keyboards.great_elmo wrote:
Yep. K270 user. Feels out of place with my decently expensive mouse.
Lapizote wrote:
the old rakk ilis that i had when i was 16 died like a year ago. i think i accidentally spilled some water on it and the pcb just gave up. rest in peace.
now a year ago I bought a rakk lam-ang pro barebones and fitted in the red outemus from the ilis. worked okay so far, then a month or so ago i decided to mod it a bit, and here is the result:picture (Rakk Lam-Ang Pro; Boba U4Ts + Akko CS Ocean Blue; cheap chinese keycaps)
keycaps need some cleaning lol
around 3/4s (65 out of 87 switches, for the alphanumeric keys) of the keyboard is fitted with boba u4ts (i have no idea if its the 62g or 68g variant) that i bought from a friend for around $16 (it was just lying around and he didnt use it for around 2 years). he already lubed it with krytox 205g0, which i know is usually not recommended for tactiles (i had a friend try it out by playing mania once, he commented that the upstroke felt a lil slow which was messing up his long note releases) - but i don't really have the motivation to open up the switches just to remove 2 year-old lubing. still feels great for typing regardless
the rest of the switches are just akko ocean blues that i had lying around, i lubed them with krytox 205g0.
the stabilizers are just the stock ones that it came with. it was already pre-lubed when i opened it up, but i decided to lube it some more with krytox 205g0 (both the stems and the wire). also tried out the holee mod but i just couldn't get it right so i just removed it.
the keycaps are a random set of cinnamoroll-themed PBT keycaps that I got off datablitz for $14 (idk why the listing says royal kludge keycaps, they are not royal kludge keycaps). i don't have any more to say about them other than they feel better than the stock keycaps that the lam-ang pro came with.
the casing itself isn't really special, just a simple tray-mounted plastic case that was also already fitted with foam from the factory (i may try replacing it with eva foam to see if it changes the sound). as for the pcb i did 2 layers of the tempest mod.
as for the miscellaneous stuff: the keyboard has a bluetooth function (no 2.4 ghz though) but i never bothered to actually try it out so idk if its any good. it also has some extra features like a windows/super key disable button (actually useful as i tend to fat finger it when playing games) and a scroll wheel for adjusting rgb brightness and system volume (both of which is sadly removed in the pro max version in favour of a TFT screen - would love to try that one out sometime though because its actually gasket-mounted).
here is a typing test that i did, apologies for the sort-of crappy mic and background noise:
overall i'm pretty happy with this $60-ish (cheating because of the cheap-ass bobas i snagged) build (though I don't really have much to compare it to besides my old rakk ilis and a friend's royal kludge r65). maybe i would try changing the stabs but its not really in my priority right now (as i don't want to spend any more money on keyboards as of the moment lol)
Kaaruumii wrote:
tad alr knows what my keyboard looks like but once again here ya go (i edited out my foot this time lmao also i use a diff keyboard now but same keycaps this pic was hyperX alloy origins core reds nows its ck530 reds)
to give a slightly better explanation this keyboard is the CK530 with gateron reds from coolermaster, for osu mania it feels really solid and the switches press down very smoothly with next to no resistance which is perfect to me. i actually ended up swapping 4 of the keycaps with real PBT keycaps just for mania (these ones were advertised as PBT but it really doesnt feel like they are) tad predicted that the keys were going to get damaged easily and only for the W and S keys they have somewhat because of my abnormal middle finger (bike accident in 5th grade) which has a thicker nail because all of the rest of the keys are fine (slight scratches on the previous mania keys but mostly good). The best part for me was this keyboard was only 35 bucks on amazon (used but still very nice) and i would def buy another and i tried another this time with browns but i fucked up and bought the CK530 V2 which is a LITERAL downgrade, 500hz polling rate instead of 1000hz, the keyswitches are TTC aka cheap chinashits that break in a few months and even the software for the V2 doesnt properly load your lighting settings until you manually open the software and click on the lighting tab EVERY TIME YOU WANT TO LOAD YOUR CORRECT RGB SETTINGS, meanwhile the original CK530 software lets you save your rgb settings and you dont ever need to use the software ever again!
basically i think its a really nice keyboard for mania/rhythm games in general especially at a good price for what you get (yes the keycaps i bought that were not even PBT cost more than this keyboard but i love kurumi so its ok 👍
i find it kinda funny i think the same way about custom keyboards with the very high prices and stuff like that, i really never understood why pay $300+ for a keyboard when a mechanical gaming keyboard does the same thing. personally if i wasnt a mania player id invest in a better keyboard just to experience the quality difference but id rather spend 35 bucks every year when it eventually breaks rather than 350 bucks every year but thats just me igTad Fibonacci wrote:
Overall, it's a typical gaymer keyboard, not very special and not much to say about, but it functions and is still better than a typical Dell office keyboard.
Karmine wrote:
How do you even break a mechanical keyboard? I've had mine for at least 5 years, played osu a lot on it and it's still good as new.
Some treat this as a hobby and that's fine. If they have the money to buy such expensive things, their money. If it works for them, that's great. If your current keyboard works for you, that's great.Kaaruumii wrote:
Overall, it's a typical gaymer keyboard, not very special and not much to say about, but it functions and is still better than a typical Dell office keyboard.
i find it kinda funny i think the same way about custom keyboards with the very high prices and stuff like that, i really never understood why pay $300+ for a keyboard when a mechanical gaming keyboard does the same thing. personally if i wasnt a mania player id invest in a better keyboard just to experience the quality difference but id rather spend 35 bucks every year when it eventually breaks rather than 350 bucks every year but thats just me ig
i actually do this to my keyboard in maniaKaaruumii wrote:
Karmine wrote:
How do you even break a mechanical keyboard? I've had mine for at least 5 years, played osu a lot on it and it's still good as new.
not me
Kaaruumii wrote:
i find it kinda funny i think the same way about custom keyboards with the very high prices and stuff like that, i really never understood why pay $300+ for a keyboard when a mechanical gaming keyboard does the same thing. personally if i wasnt a mania player id invest in a better keyboard just to experience the quality difference but id rather spend 35 bucks every year when it eventually breaks rather than 350 bucks every year but thats just me ig
ty for the honest review even though i really like the keycap design XD these dont seem to attract dirt or dust but grease does build up from what ive experienced and its hard to clean out
It's been 4 years since and there is absolutely no noticeable wear off the paint or whatever you think it is. It's as sharp as day 1. That's even after giving the 4 specific keys for mania and 2 for standard proper use over the years.Tad wrote:
3rd downside is the keycaps.
You'd think for the price they'd give you decent keycaps, but no they're just keycaps coated in black paint and then lasered.
This makes for very sharp looking keycaps and it makes the back lighting shines through quite well, but these caps aren't very durable and can wear off relatively quick, turning into blobs of light depending on how often you uses it.
That's surprising.abraker wrote:
It's been 4 years since and there is absolutely no noticeable wear off the paint or whatever you think it is. It's as sharp as day 1. That's even after giving the 4 specific keys for mania and 2 for standard proper use over the years.Tad wrote:
3rd downside is the keycaps.
You'd think for the price they'd give you decent keycaps, but no they're just keycaps coated in black paint and then lasered.
This makes for very sharp looking keycaps and it makes the back lighting shines through quite well, but these caps aren't very durable and can wear off relatively quick, turning into blobs of light depending on how often you uses it.
the majority of my keycaps have no noticeable wear whatsoever so im pretty sure it has to do with nail length, my assumption is that tad has longer nails than abraker does therefore its not as bad as you would thinkTad Fibonacci wrote:
That's surprising.abraker wrote:
It's been 4 years since and there is absolutely no noticeable wear off the paint or whatever you think it is. It's as sharp as day 1. That's even after giving the 4 specific keys for mania and 2 for standard proper use over the years.Tad wrote:
3rd downside is the keycaps.
You'd think for the price they'd give you decent keycaps, but no they're just keycaps coated in black paint and then lasered.
This makes for very sharp looking keycaps and it makes the back lighting shines through quite well, but these caps aren't very durable and can wear off relatively quick, turning into blobs of light depending on how often you uses it.
Usually lazered ABS keycaps like those would deteriorate and would shine up quite quickly.
One of my old keyboard have those kind of caps too and they shined up quite badly and looked disgusting. Although the legends haven't faded yet but tbf I didn't use that board that extensively.
Nah, I always have my nails trimmed.Kaaruumii wrote:
the majority of my keycaps have no noticeable wear whatsoever so im pretty sure it has to do with nail length, my assumption is that tad has longer nails than abraker does therefore its not as bad as you would think
interesting... maybe i just dont use the other keys as much as i think lolTad Fibonacci wrote:
Nah, I always have my nails trimmed.Kaaruumii wrote:
the majority of my keycaps have no noticeable wear whatsoever so im pretty sure it has to do with nail length, my assumption is that tad has longer nails than abraker does therefore its not as bad as you would think
This is going to be my next keyboard for sure. I currently have a GXT 863 Mazz and it's slowly breaking itself.Farfocele wrote:
(warning: excessive yapping incoming)
I own a Keychron Q1 board, which I got on a rather big sale, when it was pretty much the best option for the price in Poland. (like $75 off of the regular $200 price in Poland)AestheticsThe keyboard is just your regular keyboard in terms of looks. It's an exploded 75% layout in a regular rectangular shape. The keycaps are doubleshot PBT keycaps with a OSA profile. The keycaps are mostly a dark gray, but the accents are a nice purple color. (Enter and Esc especially are a discord sorta color.) The cable is nothing special - just a normal USB-C cable. The case is also a nice purple color - I would call it dark purple but it does become lighter under light.Build QualityThe keyboard is held together with some screws (like most keyboards honestly), and it sorta has 2 parts to it - the top part and bottom part, as you could see in the pics. It has a CNC aluminum body, and a regular steel plate afaik. Other than that, I cannot really speak more about the build quality, but it is a rather heavy board - I feel like I could use it as a weapon if need be.SwitchesThe switches used by the keyboard are the K Pro Banana switches. They are tactile switches, which are supposed to feel like Holy Pandas. I unfortunately do not have any Pandas on me to test them out, but the switches do feel and sound pretty good. They do not ping much, and are pretty clacky switches, all things considered. They were pre-lubed - I think they were lubed pretty well, but I do not doubt a professional lubing switches would do a better job.Typing SoundAs for the typing sounds, I will provide them down in a sound test - full disclosure though, the keyboard was modded with swapping out the bottom foam for a thicker one, the force break mod, tape mod (3 layers), and PE foam mod with the old bottom foam (it was rather thin.)Extra FeaturesThere are some pretty handy features in the keyboard - adjustable RGB (there are some presets in VIA, although you can use QMK to make your own.) - I just set the lights to purple though. With VIA, you can also create some macros, VIA is just a great keyboard firmware. The keyboard also is gasket mounted, although after all the mods the flex from that is sorta minimal. You can also remap the keys of your choosing on another layer and access it with a key dedicated to the other layer. The keyboard also has south-facing LEDs, which eliminates interference when using certain keycaps. Other than that, the keyboard also has hotswap switches - although that's to be expected, it would be more shocking if it did not have hotswap at that price point. Oh, and it also has a knob.PricingThe same keyboard can be bought on Keychron's website for $179, but the keyboard cost ~$125 for me, and that was on a sale from $200 because prices in Poland tend to be higher due to the 23% VAT. If there was a price which would be the fairest to judge the keyboard on, it would be the $179 one, since it would likely be the one that applies to the most.Pictures + Sound tests
The front of the keyboard.
thebuttback of the keyboard.
---- Sound Tests ----
A chill sound test (~100WPM)
A full-speed sound test (200WPM+)
You should definitely consider it. Idk what the poster will rate the board, but it's gotta be at least a 5/10 XDI AM VERY SMART wrote:
This is going to be my next keyboard for sure. I currently have a GXT 863 Mazz and it's slowly breaking itself.Farfocele wrote:
(warning: excessive yapping incoming)
I own a Keychron Q1 board, which I got on a rather big sale, when it was pretty much the best option for the price in Poland. (like $75 off of the regular $200 price in Poland)AestheticsThe keyboard is just your regular keyboard in terms of looks. It's an exploded 75% layout in a regular rectangular shape. The keycaps are doubleshot PBT keycaps with a OSA profile. The keycaps are mostly a dark gray, but the accents are a nice purple color. (Enter and Esc especially are a discord sorta color.) The cable is nothing special - just a normal USB-C cable. The case is also a nice purple color - I would call it dark purple but it does become lighter under light.Build QualityThe keyboard is held together with some screws (like most keyboards honestly), and it sorta has 2 parts to it - the top part and bottom part, as you could see in the pics. It has a CNC aluminum body, and a regular steel plate afaik. Other than that, I cannot really speak more about the build quality, but it is a rather heavy board - I feel like I could use it as a weapon if need be.SwitchesThe switches used by the keyboard are the K Pro Banana switches. They are tactile switches, which are supposed to feel like Holy Pandas. I unfortunately do not have any Pandas on me to test them out, but the switches do feel and sound pretty good. They do not ping much, and are pretty clacky switches, all things considered. They were pre-lubed - I think they were lubed pretty well, but I do not doubt a professional lubing switches would do a better job.Typing SoundAs for the typing sounds, I will provide them down in a sound test - full disclosure though, the keyboard was modded with swapping out the bottom foam for a thicker one, the force break mod, tape mod (3 layers), and PE foam mod with the old bottom foam (it was rather thin.)Extra FeaturesThere are some pretty handy features in the keyboard - adjustable RGB (there are some presets in VIA, although you can use QMK to make your own.) - I just set the lights to purple though. With VIA, you can also create some macros, VIA is just a great keyboard firmware. The keyboard also is gasket mounted, although after all the mods the flex from that is sorta minimal. You can also remap the keys of your choosing on another layer and access it with a key dedicated to the other layer. The keyboard also has south-facing LEDs, which eliminates interference when using certain keycaps. Other than that, the keyboard also has hotswap switches - although that's to be expected, it would be more shocking if it did not have hotswap at that price point. Oh, and it also has a knob.PricingThe same keyboard can be bought on Keychron's website for $179, but the keyboard cost ~$125 for me, and that was on a sale from $200 because prices in Poland tend to be higher due to the 23% VAT. If there was a price which would be the fairest to judge the keyboard on, it would be the $179 one, since it would likely be the one that applies to the most.Pictures + Sound tests
The front of the keyboard.
thebuttback of the keyboard.
---- Sound Tests ----
A chill sound test (~100WPM)
A full-speed sound test (200WPM+)
is that the polish layout?Farfocele wrote:
(warning: excessive yapping incoming)
I own a Keychron Q1 board, which I got on a rather big sale, when it was pretty much the best option for the price in Poland. (like $75 off of the regular $200 price in Poland)AestheticsThe keyboard is just your regular keyboard in terms of looks. It's an exploded 75% layout in a regular rectangular shape. The keycaps are doubleshot PBT keycaps with a OSA profile. The keycaps are mostly a dark gray, but the accents are a nice purple color. (Enter and Esc especially are a discord sorta color.) The cable is nothing special - just a normal USB-C cable. The case is also a nice purple color - I would call it dark purple but it does become lighter under light.Build QualityThe keyboard is held together with some screws (like most keyboards honestly), and it sorta has 2 parts to it - the top part and bottom part, as you could see in the pics. It has a CNC aluminum body, and a regular steel plate afaik. Other than that, I cannot really speak more about the build quality, but it is a rather heavy board - I feel like I could use it as a weapon if need be.SwitchesThe switches used by the keyboard are the K Pro Banana switches. They are tactile switches, which are supposed to feel like Holy Pandas. I unfortunately do not have any Pandas on me to test them out, but the switches do feel and sound pretty good. They do not ping much, and are pretty clacky switches, all things considered. They were pre-lubed - I think they were lubed pretty well, but I do not doubt a professional lubing switches would do a better job.Typing SoundAs for the typing sounds, I will provide them down in a sound test - full disclosure though, the keyboard was modded with swapping out the bottom foam for a thicker one, the force break mod, tape mod (3 layers), and PE foam mod with the old bottom foam (it was rather thin.)Extra FeaturesThere are some pretty handy features in the keyboard - adjustable RGB (there are some presets in VIA, although you can use QMK to make your own.) - I just set the lights to purple though. With VIA, you can also create some macros, VIA is just a great keyboard firmware. The keyboard also is gasket mounted, although after all the mods the flex from that is sorta minimal. You can also remap the keys of your choosing on another layer and access it with a key dedicated to the other layer. The keyboard also has south-facing LEDs, which eliminates interference when using certain keycaps. Other than that, the keyboard also has hotswap switches - although that's to be expected, it would be more shocking if it did not have hotswap at that price point. Oh, and it also has a knob.PricingThe same keyboard can be bought on Keychron's website for $179, but the keyboard cost ~$125 for me, and that was on a sale from $200 because prices in Poland tend to be higher due to the 23% VAT. If there was a price which would be the fairest to judge the keyboard on, it would be the $179 one, since it would likely be the one that applies to the most.Pictures + Sound tests
The front of the keyboard.
thebuttback of the keyboard.
---- Sound Tests ----
A chill sound test (~100WPM)
A full-speed sound test (200WPM+)
There are different ISO versions (no polish ones though), but this was the ANSI layout (pretty much a normal keyboard with no big enter key)Polyspora wrote:
is that the polish layout?Farfocele wrote:
(warning: excessive yapping incoming)
I own a Keychron Q1 board, which I got on a rather big sale, when it was pretty much the best option for the price in Poland. (like $75 off of the regular $200 price in Poland)AestheticsThe keyboard is just your regular keyboard in terms of looks. It's an exploded 75% layout in a regular rectangular shape. The keycaps are doubleshot PBT keycaps with a OSA profile. The keycaps are mostly a dark gray, but the accents are a nice purple color. (Enter and Esc especially are a discord sorta color.) The cable is nothing special - just a normal USB-C cable. The case is also a nice purple color - I would call it dark purple but it does become lighter under light.Build QualityThe keyboard is held together with some screws (like most keyboards honestly), and it sorta has 2 parts to it - the top part and bottom part, as you could see in the pics. It has a CNC aluminum body, and a regular steel plate afaik. Other than that, I cannot really speak more about the build quality, but it is a rather heavy board - I feel like I could use it as a weapon if need be.SwitchesThe switches used by the keyboard are the K Pro Banana switches. They are tactile switches, which are supposed to feel like Holy Pandas. I unfortunately do not have any Pandas on me to test them out, but the switches do feel and sound pretty good. They do not ping much, and are pretty clacky switches, all things considered. They were pre-lubed - I think they were lubed pretty well, but I do not doubt a professional lubing switches would do a better job.Typing SoundAs for the typing sounds, I will provide them down in a sound test - full disclosure though, the keyboard was modded with swapping out the bottom foam for a thicker one, the force break mod, tape mod (3 layers), and PE foam mod with the old bottom foam (it was rather thin.)Extra FeaturesThere are some pretty handy features in the keyboard - adjustable RGB (there are some presets in VIA, although you can use QMK to make your own.) - I just set the lights to purple though. With VIA, you can also create some macros, VIA is just a great keyboard firmware. The keyboard also is gasket mounted, although after all the mods the flex from that is sorta minimal. You can also remap the keys of your choosing on another layer and access it with a key dedicated to the other layer. The keyboard also has south-facing LEDs, which eliminates interference when using certain keycaps. Other than that, the keyboard also has hotswap switches - although that's to be expected, it would be more shocking if it did not have hotswap at that price point. Oh, and it also has a knob.PricingThe same keyboard can be bought on Keychron's website for $179, but the keyboard cost ~$125 for me, and that was on a sale from $200 because prices in Poland tend to be higher due to the 23% VAT. If there was a price which would be the fairest to judge the keyboard on, it would be the $179 one, since it would likely be the one that applies to the most.Pictures + Sound tests
The front of the keyboard.
thebuttback of the keyboard.
---- Sound Tests ----
A chill sound test (~100WPM)
A full-speed sound test (200WPM+)
Farfocele wrote:
(warning: excessive yapping incoming)
I own a Keychron Q1 board, which I got on a rather big sale, when it was pretty much the best option for the price in Poland. (like $75 off of the regular $200 price in Poland)AestheticsThe keyboard is just your regular keyboard in terms of looks. It's an exploded 75% layout in a regular rectangular shape. The keycaps are doubleshot PBT keycaps with a OSA profile. The keycaps are mostly a dark gray, but the accents are a nice purple color. (Enter and Esc especially are a discord sorta color.) The cable is nothing special - just a normal USB-C cable. The case is also a nice purple color - I would call it dark purple but it does become lighter under light.Build QualityThe keyboard is held together with some screws (like most keyboards honestly), and it sorta has 2 parts to it - the top part and bottom part, as you could see in the pics. It has a CNC aluminum body, and a regular steel plate afaik. Other than that, I cannot really speak more about the build quality, but it is a rather heavy board - I feel like I could use it as a weapon if need be.SwitchesThe switches used by the keyboard are the K Pro Banana switches. They are tactile switches, which are supposed to feel like Holy Pandas. I unfortunately do not have any Pandas on me to test them out, but the switches do feel and sound pretty good. They do not ping much, and are pretty clacky switches, all things considered. They were pre-lubed - I think they were lubed pretty well, but I do not doubt a professional lubing switches would do a better job.Typing SoundAs for the typing sounds, I will provide them down in a sound test - full disclosure though, the keyboard was modded with swapping out the bottom foam for a thicker one, the force break mod, tape mod (3 layers), and PE foam mod with the old bottom foam (it was rather thin.)Extra FeaturesThere are some pretty handy features in the keyboard - adjustable RGB (there are some presets in VIA, although you can use QMK to make your own.) - I just set the lights to purple though. With VIA, you can also create some macros, VIA is just a great keyboard firmware. The keyboard also is gasket mounted, although after all the mods the flex from that is sorta minimal. You can also remap the keys of your choosing on another layer and access it with a key dedicated to the other layer. The keyboard also has south-facing LEDs, which eliminates interference when using certain keycaps. Other than that, the keyboard also has hotswap switches - although that's to be expected, it would be more shocking if it did not have hotswap at that price point. Oh, and it also has a knob.PricingThe same keyboard can be bought on Keychron's website for $179, but the keyboard cost ~$125 for me, and that was on a sale from $200 because prices in Poland tend to be higher due to the 23% VAT. If there was a price which would be the fairest to judge the keyboard on, it would be the $179 one, since it would likely be the one that applies to the most.Pictures + Sound tests
The front of the keyboard.
thebuttback of the keyboard.
---- Sound Tests ----
A chill sound test (~100WPM)
A full-speed sound test (200WPM+)
great rating, thanks!Tad Fibonacci wrote:
Farfocele's keyboardFarfocele wrote:
(warning: excessive yapping incoming)
I own a Keychron Q1 board, which I got on a rather big sale, when it was pretty much the best option for the price in Poland. (like $75 off of the regular $200 price in Poland)AestheticsThe keyboard is just your regular keyboard in terms of looks. It's an exploded 75% layout in a regular rectangular shape. The keycaps are doubleshot PBT keycaps with a OSA profile. The keycaps are mostly a dark gray, but the accents are a nice purple color. (Enter and Esc especially are a discord sorta color.) The cable is nothing special - just a normal USB-C cable. The case is also a nice purple color - I would call it dark purple but it does become lighter under light.Build QualityThe keyboard is held together with some screws (like most keyboards honestly), and it sorta has 2 parts to it - the top part and bottom part, as you could see in the pics. It has a CNC aluminum body, and a regular steel plate afaik. Other than that, I cannot really speak more about the build quality, but it is a rather heavy board - I feel like I could use it as a weapon if need be.SwitchesThe switches used by the keyboard are the K Pro Banana switches. They are tactile switches, which are supposed to feel like Holy Pandas. I unfortunately do not have any Pandas on me to test them out, but the switches do feel and sound pretty good. They do not ping much, and are pretty clacky switches, all things considered. They were pre-lubed - I think they were lubed pretty well, but I do not doubt a professional lubing switches would do a better job.Typing SoundAs for the typing sounds, I will provide them down in a sound test - full disclosure though, the keyboard was modded with swapping out the bottom foam for a thicker one, the force break mod, tape mod (3 layers), and PE foam mod with the old bottom foam (it was rather thin.)Extra FeaturesThere are some pretty handy features in the keyboard - adjustable RGB (there are some presets in VIA, although you can use QMK to make your own.) - I just set the lights to purple though. With VIA, you can also create some macros, VIA is just a great keyboard firmware. The keyboard also is gasket mounted, although after all the mods the flex from that is sorta minimal. You can also remap the keys of your choosing on another layer and access it with a key dedicated to the other layer. The keyboard also has south-facing LEDs, which eliminates interference when using certain keycaps. Other than that, the keyboard also has hotswap switches - although that's to be expected, it would be more shocking if it did not have hotswap at that price point. Oh, and it also has a knob.PricingThe same keyboard can be bought on Keychron's website for $179, but the keyboard cost ~$125 for me, and that was on a sale from $200 because prices in Poland tend to be higher due to the 23% VAT. If there was a price which would be the fairest to judge the keyboard on, it would be the $179 one, since it would likely be the one that applies to the most.Pictures + Sound tests
The front of the keyboard.
thebuttback of the keyboard.
---- Sound Tests ----
A chill sound test (~100WPM)
A full-speed sound test (200WPM+)
Aesthetically speaking, it's a very coherent look and Looks like a very thematically coherent build. I personally don't like purple though and monochrome purple with grey is a bit dark looking. It it was me I'd try to put something gold colored in since purple and gold is a classic combo.
But overall, a good looking keyboard.
As for the build quality, the Q1 is from the Q line of Keychron, which is the luxury line and it was built very well. It's literally a slab of machined aluminium and would undoubtedly give someone head trauma if you were to use one as a weapon.
It also looks like from the picture of the bottom that the screws are brass screws as well so that's also a plus in terms of build quality.
If I were to nitpick though, then the board doesn't have any adjustable feet but it looks like it's already in a quite comfortable typing angle so it's not very necessary.
As for switches, again, I have not tried them before but you did mention that they were supposed to feel like Holy Pandas which I have tried. Personally I don't really like how Holy Pandas feel, but they do produce a very interesting poppy sound and that's also true with this keyboard.
It sounds very poppy and clacky which is to be expected from a aluminium case.
Plastic cases tend to sound better in my experience but this is a pretty good sounding keyboard.
As for special features, I won't comment much on RGB since I never uses that function but it's there. And remapping is pretty useful in some cases so being remappable with VIA is definitely a plus.
Volume knob is also pretty useful too.
Overall, quite a nice keyboard for a decent price.
8/10
gamerPatatitta wrote:
I initially didn't have planned to post anything on this thread, but today I was playing osu, look at the kb and thought it was funny
guess with what keys I play ctb
(the third key I use to dash is also teared out like that)
NaiseNikolai wrote:
my endgame
Lin Dolphin v3 🇰🇷
Baionlenja Bias r2 🇫🇮
TGR Jane v2 CE 🇲🇾
Realforce 88u 🇯🇵
HHKB Professional 🇯🇵
keremaru wrote:
i can't take a picture of my laptop keyboard (because my tablet keeps crashing whenever i try to open the camera), so just imagine a 70 keyboard with a bunch of dead skin cells stuck to the keycaps.
and a touchstyk with a missing cushion, so there's a crap ton of (insert whatever the hell managed to get inside the gaps of my practically unusable touchstyk) that built up in the corners.
and more dead skin cells in the gaps between the keycaps.
Corsair k63 so godgreat_elmo wrote:
Aight which board should I buy
Those looks sick.buz wrote:
Realforce FD01D0 (absolute grail of mine, only 200 were made)
Realforce 89UB (my daily work keyboard)
Realforce x G-Tune
Realforce EDIUS
JDL EKUJ7
Mitsubishi M-6905 (low topre go brrr)
ASCII Sono1 ASKeyboard (converted for modern pc, alps go brrr)
HHKB Professional 2 (BKE domes and resin hipro keycaps)
Sony BKE-2010 (not a keyboard really)
FD01D0:
ASCII, HHKB and Realforce EDIUS: