It's funny how you can write a script yourself and input it in your cfg, yet it's illegal, but somehow having the same counter strafe script inside the keyboard (also known as null binds) is somehow legal on pro scene
analog buttons can be useful in GTA5 when climbing a steep hill when the wheels are slipping on a regular keyboard, because with a gamepad this situation can be avoided
@@Szwagi I'm going to save up and get a wooting 80he its quite expensive for me, i got a good deal on the razer but its not superior to wooting since I got a chance to handle one, also im from Canada so I was saying in cad currency should of specified that mb
If you are set on a TKL layout, go Razer. The Wooting 80HE is overpriced and also very ugly, with bad build quality. Fanboys will tell you Wooting is the best. Don’t listen to them. If you are fine with a 60% layout, the Wooting 60HE will be cheaper and better. TLDR: If you want TKL, go Razer. If you want 60%, go Wooting.
this definitely effects games that are movement shooters as well, as strafing you can A-D strafe using only one finger now. Directional bias is now far easier, and allows more brainspace for aiming itself.
Razer synapse made it impossible for me to play games. It would steal focus from games when I was left-clicking. I found this is not something razer have fixed. Reddit says to uninstall synapse, reinstall it and disable notifs in synapse but this didn't fix the issue. I expect this to be an issue that is ignored by razer and I won't be buying their gaming products which inhibit me from being able to play games.
Could you please tell me if this technology will be available on wireless keyboards in the near future? Or is a wired connection required for this? Thank you.
analog switches are for sure the future especially in gaming since they offer much more flexibility and fine control compared to a digital on/off switch. apart from wooting which allows u to swap the switches and is much more silent there is no better analog keyboard than huntsman v3 pro on the market yet. many people especially pro gamers i am pretty sure don't care that much about being able to replace the switches or noise since they always play with a headset but for somebody that wants an analog keyboard that allows u to upgrade things in future and is much quieter i think the upcoming wooting 80 would make more sense. also if u already own mouse headset and other peripherals from razer u might also not consider the few extras from wooting and prefer to get the huntsman so u can control all ur peripherals from within a single software
QUESTION for those who have already typed on this keyboard. I want to buy this keyboard but I heard in reviews that it has a terrible sound of the keys Can you comment on this, please.
I have the Wooting one and two (running two for main system due to numerc) .. some features are similar, but honestly do I use them.. as I'm a "heavy typer" .. the analogue function is borderline useless for me. though build quality and overall noise/key response is great. Just wish I could better adjust to the analogue function...
I know it's apples to oranges, but I have the Nuphy Halo 75 and am extremely satisfied with it. And for that I paid the equivalent of 200 $ in my country.
Just got this keyboard! coming from Huntsman Tournament Edition TKL after 4+ years there is sometime of getting use to the V3 PRO TKL, got it on sale and in this white color is beautiful.
@@phoenixykk nice! yea it's been a nice transition! I've had no issues with optical switches and I find my experience with razer keyboards a positive experience! hope you are enjoying yours!
@@ZskZoom I don't think it would be unless they are trying to concentrate or sleep. People around me don't complain but the noise and clackiness is noticeable. I also recently changed my keycaps to Razer's Phantom Keycaps and that helped a bit.
ive had a razer deathadder and blackwidow keyboard for like 5 years and the keyboard works just as good as day 1, and the mouse is still good just showing its age sometimes
yeah ur trippin. razer sucking is more of a joke than a reality nowadays. synapse is annoying but the products are great. i wonder if you ever actually used a razer product before🤣
I've had a razar for about 7 years now maybe a bit less and it works just as good as it did on day one I've even bought others and came back to razer so idk what people talking bout, if you actually take care of your stuff it doesn't break. Only reason I'm getting this one * getting in Tuesday * is I've watched enough videos on this to know it'd be a good keyboard and a good upgrade cause I've needed one for awhile
Personally, I don't see the point of recommending this keyboard, as the wooting 80HE is coming out soon and will beat this keyboard in every aspect. Additionally, the rapid trigger functionality is worse than the one available on the wooting and the apex pro tkl while being at the exact same price point. The snap tap feature will be available on the wooting, and I'm 99% sure it's also coming to the apex pro as well.
rapid trigger function works as well as wooting unless u are comparing it to their older keyboards that they did a post-release of rapid trigger on their older switches
u see video on optimum and said that right? on optimum video is the compare of previous generation only have 1.5mm and this is newer generation with 0.1mm rapid trigger and wooting have 0.15mm so is the same on performance i guarantee but on experience i think razer switch have better. When i put hand on keycap sometime wooting have been misclick but on razer 0.1mm this issue not happen frequently like wooting 0.15mm
@@nguyengiabach4317if you're misclicking on Wooting at 0.15mm and not razer at 0.1mm that means Razer has a deadzone issue and is not as accurate at sensing pressure from your finger as Wooting, you can't just set things to the lowest actuation on Wooting because the simple weight of your finger resting on the keys will be enough to make you move in game, so you need to add your own amount of wiggle room because you're not a machine that can sense in millimeters how far you're pressing a smoothly traveling key in high intensity moments.