![]() However, no matter which keyboard you choose, you make compromises. ![]() Presumably, you don’t want to drag a different keyboard out of the closet each time you browse the web, do your taxes, write the next Great American Novel, or what-have-you. That’s great if all you do on your PC is games, games, games.īut as I discussed in my review of the 2014 BlackWidow and as I’ve said on PCWorld time and time again: A keyboard is for more than just gaming. Razer claims this design is good for gaming: You can double- and triple-press Razer’s keys a bit faster than standard Cherry Blues. This means you get a lot of resistance up front and nearly none after a key press registers. They require the same force to press as Cherry MX Blues (50 cN) and feature the same kind of clicky feel, but with a slightly higher actuation point and a lower reset point. In my opinion, they’re bargain-basement Cherry MX Blues. And with the design having changed so little, that also means this keyboard still packs Razer’s own mechanical switches-the model we reviewed had Greens. The remaining features are pretty much identical to the 2014 BlackWidow-same fabric cable sheath, same diagonal cutouts in the lower corners, same media keys. The only other tweak I spotted is so small that it’s almost not worth mentioning, but the Function key now lights up. Those two changes make up the bulk of the 2016 overhaul.
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