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These are the four keyboards I'm still using after reviewing keyboards for years — How a 500 Hz TKL and a Stream Deck layout dominated my desk

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Why This Matters

This article highlights the importance of customized and versatile keyboards for both productivity and gaming, emphasizing how specific features like macro keys, rotary knobs, and integrated screens can enhance user experience. For consumers and the tech industry, it underscores the value of adaptable peripherals that cater to diverse needs, encouraging innovation in keyboard design.

Key Takeaways

I test a lot of keyboards, but that doesn't mean I'm always using a brand-new keyboard. I do make a point to type every keyboard review on the keyboard I'm testing, but I usually stop using the keyboard once I've finished the review. I'm a writer and a gamer, so I'm very particular when it comes to the keyboard I use every day — and it's usually difficult for me to find one keyboard that satisfies both my writing side and my gaming side. But there are a few keyboards I keep coming back to for one reason or another.

First things first: while I test a lot of keyboards, any full-size keyboard (one with a 10-key numberpad, that is), is probably going to get a second look from me. I'm the kind of person who really needs a 10-key numberpad, a full function row, and, ideally, a higher-than-average number of dedicated macro keys. While I don't personally need a volume knob — I usually map volume control to two of my mouse's 19 buttons — I won't say no to a rotary knob (or two). So this is, to some extent, informed by my preferences and isn't just a purely objective list of the best keyboards we've tested (this is a more objective list of the best keyboards we've tested ), but don't worry — it's not all full-size keyboards.

My current daily driver technically isn't a full-size keyboard, but functionally it... sort of is. It's the Corsair Galleon 100 SD , which I've been using pretty consistently since I reviewed it back in February. It's technically a TKL layout — full function row, navigation cluster, and arrow keys, but no numberpad — but it has a built-in Stream Deck with two rotary knobs, 12 customizable LCD keys, and a full-color screen (non-touch). I thought I needed a numberpad, but what I really needed was... well, a bunch of extra keys next to the keyboard that basically make up a numberpad, I guess.

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(Image credit: Tom's Hardware)

But the built-in Stream Deck isn't the main reason I've been using this keyboard so consistently — it's the keyboard itself. This is a great-feeling and -sounding keyboard — it comes with Corsair's MLX purple switches (linear), which are pre-lubed and have an actuation force of 45g. I don't usually like linear switches, but these are smooth, stable, and lightweight, and they have a nice thocky sound when they bottom out, which is unusual for linear switches. The keyboard's PCB is hot-swappable, but I haven't bothered switching these out because I genuinely enjoy typing on them. The keycaps are double-shot PBT, but I've noticed the alphanumeric keys are starting to get a very minor shine after three months of consistent use. And I like that they're lower profile (close to Cherry profile).

Of course, the built-in Stream Deck is definitely part of what keeps this keyboard on my desk. I still use the 12 LCD keys as a numberpad much of the time, because I use an external free cam software in several of the games I play, and its controls are set up by default to work with a numberpad. But for when I'm not using the free cam software, I've programmed in a couple pages' worth of other shortcuts (though one page is just various special characters/symbols I usually insert with Alt codes — so, technically still numberpad functionality). I'm still not fully convinced that a built-in Stream Deck trumps a numberpad, but I like the Galleon 100 SD's keyboard enough that I'm willing to work with it.

(Image credit: Tom's Hardware)

Full-size gaming keyboards are sort of hard to come by — prior to the Galleon 100 SD, I was (reluctantly) using the full-size Glorious GMMK 3 as my "numberpad keyboard," alongside the Wobkey Crush 80 Reboot Pro as my "typing keyboard." While the GMMK 3 is beautiful and super solidly built (my iteration was a custom-built wireless full-size version with a full aluminum case and magnetic tactile switches), its typing experience leaves something to be desired. Enough "something" that I switched it out for the Crush 80 Reboot Pro if I knew I was going to be just typing for a while. Occasionally, I also switched it out with the Razer DeathStalker V2 Pro , which is a full-size wireless low profile keyboard with optical switches (it comes with both linear and clicky switch options; I like the clicky switch version), just because it was easier to quickly switch between the DeathStalker V2 Pro and the Crush 80 Reboot Pro — the GMMK 3 is not only one of the heaviest keyboards I own, the way its base flares outward makes it very difficult to pick up.

(Image credit: Tom's Hardware)

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