Razer - BlackWidow - BlackWidow Original - BlackWidow Regular - BlackWidow Chroma - BlackWidow Chroma (Original) - Mecánico - Ergonómico - Gaming - Español
Really nice keyboard
Opinión original: I upgraded to this from my Blackwidow Ultimate (2014) keyboard. I'm not a massive PC gamer, but I use my keyboard at least 50+ hours a week - mostly for work - and I liked the look and feel of my Ultimate (until I broke a key cleaning it...), so I thought I'd give this a go. The keystrokes feel really familiar, making the transition between the two pretty seamless, but there are a couple of extras on this Elite keyboard that I'm really liking. With the Ultimate, you had to remove the keys to get at dust/debris because they were set into a... Pit, I guess- Like a traditional keyboard. And, man, did it gather a bunch of crap over its 5 years of use. The keys on this Elite are set on top of the keyboard though, which allows dust to be blown out really easily or swiped through with a cotton bud without the need for taking the keys apart. The media keys are great. It's so much nicer than having to FN+F3/F4 to adjust volume, and having the ability to pause/resume/mute/skip just a button press away is really handy. The 'click' button press of each of these keys is really satisfying, and the dial turns smoothly with gentle clicking feedback. The quality of it all is excellent. The colours are a wee bit gimmicky but kinda fun. My young kids like hitting a key and having it ripple out, and playing around with the Chroma studio is kinda fun at first. I did notice that the React (where you press a key and just that key lights up) and Ripple (where the lights ripple out from your key press) effects you can add seem to stop working after a little while. Whereas effects like Flames and Static stick around pretty consistently. Probably a problem with the software rather than the keyboard. The sleep setting for the LEDs - which I've set to 10mins - seems to work consistently and reliably. On the software too - I hooked up my Hue lights using Razer Synapse to see what it did, but I'm not sure what the purpose is. All it seemed to do was lock the lights in the area out from the rest of my home automation system, so I disabled that pretty quickly. The wrist rest is really nice, having not used one for years it actually feels excellent on my wrists/hands. One tiny niggle with it is that sometimes it pushes up underneath the bottom row of keys, making it impossible to press them (and you don't notice until you go to press one). Otherwise, it's sturdy, and the magnet system connects it to the keyboard nicely. In terms of the structure/build of the keyboard, it gets a big tick from me. The USB port actually takes a bit of force to get the USB into it, and it really clings on tightly - which I guess is for gaming where you wouldn't want whatever is plugged in to rip out accidentally. The USB port is on the opposite (left) side of the keyboard compared to my old Ultimate which took a small amount of adjustment but doesn't bother me. The keyboard itself is quite hefty, it has a really solid weight to it and feels like it could take a battering. The kickstands underneath are a massive improvement on the Ultimate - I found the Ultimate would quite easily collapse if you tried to shift the keyboard forward, but the Elite has a lot more resistance to it and slides across the desk nicely. I haven't tried out the audio passthrough - I use Bluetooth headphones, so I can't comment on that. The cables for the keyboard are braided (as the Ultimate was) and really solid feeling, there's a small routing hole for them to tuck through underneath, as well as a rubber clip tie to tidy up the length a bit. The USB plugs at the end of the cables (there are two - one for the keyboard, one for the passthrough port) have green accents in them which is a nice touch, but otherwise, are pretty standard. I would recommend this keyboard. I think the software could do with some improving, but overall I'm really stoked with this purchase. Menos
Kieran · Reseña escrita por mightyape.com.au - 21 de junio de 2019