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Nepal, Kathmandu
1 Level
755 Review
40 Karma

Review on ๐Ÿ’ก Cooler Master MK730: Tenkeyless Mechanical Keyboard for Gaming with Brown Switches, Cherry MX, customizable RGB Lighting, and Detachable Wrist Support by Matthew Sutton

Revainrating 2 out of 5

The perfect keyboard.

I have the keyless version of this Cherry MX keyboard. I love the tactile keystroke and I love the RGB lighting. While you don't need any software to reprogram your keyboard lights/keys/macros, I find the software very easy and intuitive to use compared to customizing keyboard lights and macros, and it's a very lightweight program that's free of all viruses . There are many different ways to create RGB lighting effects, and the photos and videos I submitted show my favorite RGB pattern: a loop where the color spectrum rotates around the center of the keyboard. I don't use the magnetic wrist rest that comes with the keyboard. I already had a different wrist rest from a different setup. I think the great gaming wrist pad is better than the wrist rest included here because it's more comfortable and elevates your wrists higher until they're flush with the keys (which helps reduce the chances of carpal tunnel syndrome). ), more and doesn't cover the really cool front LED on the keyboard. Now you will find that the keycaps I use are also different. I think if you really like the RGB colors of mechanical keyboards, you should consider replacing the ABS keycaps that come with this keyboard with ABS acrylic dual keycaps. These keys look very nice on the Cherry MX RGB backlit keyboard as you can see from the photos and videos. The keycaps I use are Red Dragon A105 acrylic keycaps, which typically cost around $10-$15. The aesthetics are worth it and I personally love the super smooth and sleek feel of these keycaps. It complements this keyboard very well. My only initial complaint was that they replaced the right mouse button on the right side of the keyboard with a second Windows key. This was annoying because I actually liked the right mouse button and the button remapping software doesn't have the ability to remap the second Windows key to the right mouse button: you can only remap it to keys that already exist on the keyboard. However, Shift + F10 is another way to right-click on the keyboard in general. So I used the software for this keyboard to assign the 2nd Windows key to a macro: Shift+F10. And I got my right mouse button back! ^_^

Pros
  • Still happy
Cons
  • Some difficulties