Epomaker G84 Mechanical Keyboard Review

I get it, mechanical keyboards can be expensive. Finding the perfect mechanical keyboard for work and/or play is an expensive hobby that spans years. Don’t ask me how much I, myself, have spent on this hobby, since…well, it’s a lot. The quest for finding the thockiest and best-feeling keyboard has me strapped in quite tightly. I digress. Epomaker, a mechanical keyboard manufacturer I’ve grown to l...[Read More]

Epomaker TH108 Keyboard Review

A short while ago, I reviewed Epomaker’s TH99. It enthralled me with its creaminess. Its Creamy Jade switches more than lived up to their names as I tip-tapped away doing work and playing video games. It was a great keyboard with one fatal flaw: I wanted it just a smidge bigger, in a full-sized keyboard format. I also wanted another keyboard to use with those Creamy Jade switches… …and now I have ...[Read More]

MelGeek REAL67 Magnetic Keyboard Review

It’s been over a year since I’ve tested out a Melgeek keyboard – the Cyber01. It’s not because they haven’t been releasing keyboards, not at all. It’s because they’ve been slowly but steadily releasing keyboards, taking meaningful steps in iterations and ensuring that they don’t miss when producing a keyboard that players will love. It’s a bold approach to keyboard design that signifies that new m...[Read More]

AULA F108 Keyboard Review

I have been a typing enthusiast for as long as I can remember. I started a lonnnnngggg time ago on an IBM typewriter. Yes, the one with ink ribbons. Also, the one that didn’t feature the Whiteout ribbons. What a Godsend those were. It sure beat standalone Whiteout. Anyway, I digress. As time marched on, my keyboard experience journeyed from typewriter to serial wired, then from serial wired to USB...[Read More]

MechLands M75 Hall Effect Gaming Keyboard Review

Keyboards are quite expensive, folks. This is especially true for Hall Effect keyboards – you know, the fancy keyboards that use magnets and are far more durable than typical mechanical keyboards. In this economy, it can be difficult to stomach a new peripheral for your computer with tariffs, high prices for high quality products, and maintaining your setup altogether. When I opened the MechLands ...[Read More]

Epomaker Galaxy100 Mechanical Keyboard Review

Far too much of the prebuilt mechanical keyboard market is comprised of 75% or smaller layouts. I get it, though – larger (read: 98% or more) layout keyboards are more expensive to manufacture. They’re bulky. They take up too much space on one’s desk. Number pads and function rows can be niche use cases, sure. Sometimes you need a full-sized keyboard to mirror the standard full-size membrane keybo...[Read More]

ROCCAT Vulcan II Max Review

It certainly has been a month of keyboards from ROCCAT. First, I had the pleasure of reviewing the ROCCAT Vulcan Mini II keyboard which turned the heads of my many associates and worked like a charm in almost every manner. Now, I have had the pleasure of working with its bigger, shiner beefy brother the ROCCAT Vulcan II Max. It’s a full keyboard that features some beautiful aesthetics and some pra...[Read More]

Roccat bringing mechanical keyboard loveliness with the Vulcan 121 AIMO and 122 AIMO

Mechanical keyboards are so choice. Enjoy the official details of Roccat’s Vulcan series. San Diego, CA – September 24, 2019 – ROCCAT, Turtle Beach’s (Nasdaq: HEAR) Hamburg, Germany-based PC division today announced two new versions of its acclaimed Vulcan series mechanical PC gaming keyboard are now available for PC enthusiasts looking to up their keyboard game. The Vulcan 121 AIMO features...[Read More]