If you want the keycaps I switched to, you can use this affilate link: shorturl.at/wbNHZ (or just search Honey Milk Keycaps) Videos like this will more so be on my second channel once I get it up and running if you're interested in tech: www.youtube.com/@mogastech I did gloss over the "Snap Tap" feature a bit since Optimum did a good job at explaining it if you want to watch his video. Also because CS just banned the feature (the game it was most OP for). Most of the video is just a showcase of the Q1 HE though.
LOL the odds of this, I was literally JUST shopping around for a new keyboard and Keychron happened to be one of the brands I was looking into and this video pops up
@@mutantx327 See, I'd be suspicious of that if not for the fact that I was already subbed to Moga to begin with since long ago and that this video was likely in the works long before I started keyboard window shopping
The thing that this video made me realise is that im not drawn to mogas channel just because of his game videos , but for him himself, because i usually never watch stuff like this , unless i want to buy a specific product but i still enjoyed his video
Eh, only new character this patch is an off-field damage support; not really much to talk about there. I figure his content will be back to the normal stuff once Natlan releases.
The keeb has no snap tap. I got the newer Q3 HE that uses the same launcher. No software updates were released since the Q1 HE launch. The keyboards are really good quality, classic looking (so no bottom plate) but are a fucking brick and the switched and stabs are lubbed and smooth. Mine even has 3 dedicates keys for macros. Keykaps are highquality but have extra legends (E.g.: volume up, down, mute on f10,f11,f12), so they dont look clean/minimalistic at all. Also, their knob color dosent match their keys, I have some red keys and got the red knob extra and they are not the same shade
Keychron should have every thing from 60% up to 100% available but maybe just not in the same line. However 60% and 75% are some of the more popular sized for keyboard enthusiasts (which is the target market for these boards) So there will be less options for a full or even TKL board.
The fact that the fingers of the left hand can all move while typing and the pointer supremacy of the right hand is enough proof of being a legit keyboard-mouse gamer......
Keyboard-drop as a measure of weight for reference is freaking hilarious. How have I not seen anyone do that before? Edit: I'm not sure if you mentioned then knob, how it feels and how much you could customize it.
is this not for all their boards.? i was excited and went to this software but dont see an actuation setting in my app, using v1 75% knob ver looks the exact same as yours. or is this like an early access thing?
I have an rk61 I modded ( new switches, foam mod, balanced stabs) and it's a pretty solid keyboard. However I don't do pc gaming so I can't vouch for it there but it's nice for long typing sessions
Maybe it's because I grew up using the first computers, and these keyboards are shockingly similar to the 80s keyboards, but I just don't get the appeal, especially on people liking clacky loud keyboards. It would drive me insane to share a living space with someone using one(not specifically this brand, but all keyboards). If I could find one I would pay more for an ergonomic keyboard/vertical mouse that makes zero clicking noise at all, silent operation. All that aside, nice video, thanks for making it.
The appeal is that you can customize the sound and feel of these keyboards. I like thocky, (aka deeper sounding) quiet boards with no audible spring ping, with a low key actuation point, and no tactile bump. So I choose linear switches, foam mod the case, lube the switches and springs, and swap to XDA profile PBT key caps. The clacky lovers will be using tactile or clicky switches without lubing (or minimal lubing) and will choose boards that echo more (material and interior mods affect the sound profile) and keycaps that they prefer. There is a whole community of mechanical keyboard lovers and modders whose whole hobby is to build the perfect board. From switch type, to case, to keycap profile, there is basically a mechanical keyboard for everyone at every skill level if you know what you want. Moga is just using this one right out of the box with is perfectly fine, but it could be improved further by a hobbyist. The space bar rattles a bit, so that would be an easy fix by modding the stabilizers and balancing the wire. Keychron's target market is the keyboard hobby and enthusiast, not someone who just wants a membrane board from Apple.