![]() All in all, I am very impressed with the quality of this board’s keycaps, because too often on even the most expensive gaming keyboards, other companies will install insultingly shoddy keycaps. ![]() PBT keycaps generally hold up better in the long run than ABS ones do, and though neither is inferior, PBT caps are a better choice for gaming because they provide a better grip and their legends almost never fade. I really like how Razer went about its keycap design here, because a lot of PBT keycaps are dye-sublimation, which can cause blurry printing on the keycaps, but not here. Sitting on top of the super-fast switches are double-shot PBT keycaps that feature RGB shine through. I’m not expecting well-tuned stabilizers on a keyboard like this, but because Razer has made recent strides forward in its designs with additions like sound dampening foam, adding just a tiny bit of lube on the stabilizers would benefit the board immensely and keep up with that pattern. The clips are made of plastic, but they are really tight, which concerns me if you get this keyboard and plan on using different keycaps, because these clips are tiny and look brittle. The stabilizers Razer put in the Huntsman V2 aren’t like your usual Cherry stabilizers the stabilizers used in the Huntsman line have two clips that attach to the bottom of the spacebar. ![]() I do enjoy Kailh’s Box Pink or Navy switches, but there’s something about the Razer clicky switches that irks me, which I’ll delve into shortly in the typing experience section.īut the implementation of the stabilizers seems to be an issue here-at least for me. I don’t have a problem with all clicky switches. But in my experience, the bar didn’t make a difference when typing, other than to add an annoying rattle to the switches. Our review model arrived with clicky optical switches, with an actuation distance of 1.5mm and a 45g actuation point.Īlong with its own optical switches, Razer introduced a stabilizing bar to improve the typing experience. Two flavors of Razer optical switches are offered with the Huntsman V2 Tenkeyless: clicky (Purple) and silent linear (Red). But I don’t really understand this move by Razer I like it when companies put the cable connector in the middle, because it allows for better cable management on my setup. On the top-left of the case, the keyboard connects to the generously long 8.5 inch (216mm) detachable braided Type-C cable. The GMMK Pro 75% keyboard is an inch shorter, at 13 inches wide, while the Razer TKL is 14 inches, but at 5.5 inches front to back and 1.3 inches high, this Huntsman is otherwise about the same size as 75% competitors. People tend to forget that 75 percent keyboards are basically tenkeyless boards, just more compact and shorter by a few keys. Getting adjusted to a larger tenkeyless board after using a 75% layout for a few months was effortless. If you’re a Razer fiend, this would pair well with the Viper 8K Hz mouse, which we liked in our review but not solely because of its high polling rate. It’s what’s on the inside that matters most, right? In this case, aside from the sound-dampening foam, there’s a PCB that supports Razer’s HyperPolling technology, which allows for a polling rate of 8,000 Hz.
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