When it comes down to gaming on a PC, you cannot do it the best way without a keyboard. The question is, which category of keyboard is best? In one corner, we have the Mechanical keyboard, and in the ...
Razer's original DeathStalker keyboard series was launched nearly 10 years ago and was an accidental submission into the company's gaming keyboard lineup. Named after one of the deadliest scorpions in ...
There’s a newish development in the world of keyboards; the optical switch. It’s been around for a couple years in desktop keyboards, and recently became available on a laptop keyboard as well. These ...
Logitech sells a lot of keyboards — it’s all over our wireless keyboard roundup, for example. But you won’t find one of its models in our equivalent gaming keyboard roundup, because it tends to demand ...
ROCCAT is a name synonymous with creativity. Not afraid to break free of the style and design of other brands, they have worked hard to distinguish themselves as unique in a sea of gaming peripherals.
Managing Editor Josh Goldman is a laptop expert and has been writing about and reviewing them since built-in Wi-Fi was an optional feature. He also covers almost anything connected to a PC, including ...
I've been using a Hall effect keyboard for quite a while, and I'm keenly aware that this switch technology is the most popular for gamers right now. However, a while ago I spoke with Razer product ...
The Razer Huntsman V3 Pro’s exceptional performance it’s thanks to its Gen-2 Analog Optical Switches. These switches represent a significant advancement in keyboard technology, using light for ...
Hardware Razer's knocked $900 off the price of the glorious Blade 14 gaming laptop, cementing its place as the object of my technological desires Gaming Laptops Razer's latest Blade 14 is a real ...
Razer's previous innovation in laptop keyboards has been mostly limited to equipping them with RGB LEDs, but the new Razer Blade 15 Advanced is the first laptop with optical keyboard switches. Share ...
Making keyboards is easy, right? Just wire up a bunch of switches matrix-style to a microcontroller, slap some QMK and a set of keycaps on there and you’re good to go. Well, yeah, that might work for ...