Most people assume the keyboard is the last thing worth upgrading. That's a bad idea.
After years on a membrane board, I finally made the switch to mechanical last month. The gap is bigger than most gear reviews let on.
Went tenkeyless for one reason: desk space. A numpad that never gets touched just eats up mouse room. In competitive games, that extra few inches of mousepad space genuinely shifts how you play.
Brown switches were the pick, well, after a fair bit of back-and-forth. They're tactile enough to feel each press, quiet enough not to bother anyone nearby.
Build quality tells the real story. Typing hard on a membrane board, you'll feel it flex. The mechanical sits planted, no give. Finger fatigue during long sessions actually drops because the actuation point stays consistent on every single keypress.
Here's the thing: keycap quality varies wildly between brands. Stock caps on mine felt thin straight out of the box. Swapping to PBT doubleshot keycaps changed the whole experience, better texture, no shine after weeks of heavy use.
And honestly, most people skip that swap entirely. Big mistake.
The $50-$70 range is the sweet spot for a first mechanical keyboard. No need to go premium straight away. If possible, I'd test the switch type in a store before buying. Personal preference here matters more than any spec sheet.
After years on a membrane board, I finally made the switch to mechanical last month. The gap is bigger than most gear reviews let on.
Went tenkeyless for one reason: desk space. A numpad that never gets touched just eats up mouse room. In competitive games, that extra few inches of mousepad space genuinely shifts how you play.
Brown switches were the pick, well, after a fair bit of back-and-forth. They're tactile enough to feel each press, quiet enough not to bother anyone nearby.
Build quality tells the real story. Typing hard on a membrane board, you'll feel it flex. The mechanical sits planted, no give. Finger fatigue during long sessions actually drops because the actuation point stays consistent on every single keypress.
Here's the thing: keycap quality varies wildly between brands. Stock caps on mine felt thin straight out of the box. Swapping to PBT doubleshot keycaps changed the whole experience, better texture, no shine after weeks of heavy use.
And honestly, most people skip that swap entirely. Big mistake.
The $50-$70 range is the sweet spot for a first mechanical keyboard. No need to go premium straight away. If possible, I'd test the switch type in a store before buying. Personal preference here matters more than any spec sheet.