The YUNZII AL71 is a compact 75% (71-key) mechanical keyboard for both Windows and Mac PCs. Both the top and bottom shell are ...
CES 2016 - Cooler master is consolidating their business, and that means new products along with that new vision. One of the most anticipated of those is the revamping of their keyboards and mice, ...
The new TH99 Pro wireless gaming keyboard from Epomaker can be extensively customized with fully programmable extensions to ...
Gaming keyboards are nothing new. Neither are ones with RGB LED backlighting. With most RGB LED keyboards, you have a set number of presets that you can select from to cycle through various colors.
Which RGB gaming keyboards are best? Many gamers find RGB gaming keyboards, which have advanced backlit displays, to be a great addition to their setup. RGB backlighting allows the user to combine ...
As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases. TweakTown may also earn commissions from other affiliate partners at no extra cost to you. A strong contender to be your next keyboard! The ...
If you’ve paid money for a new gaming keyboard, mouse or headset in the past year, I’d bet you five bucks* it’s blinged out with customizable RGB LEDs. Hardware companies have been sticking little ...
G.Skill “borrows” some of the best features from its competition, repackages them, and turns out an incredible RGB keyboard—our new favorite. I never thought G.Skill would be the peripherals company ...
Asus announced an animated mechanical keyboard, the Asus ROG Strix Flare II Animate, at CES this week. It has many of the trendiest specs found in modern premium gaming keyboards, including an ...
G.SKILL International Enterprise Co., Ltd., the world’s leading manufacturer of extreme performance memory and gaming peripherals, is announcing the release of two new additions to the RIPJAWS series ...
We review the G.SKILL RipJaws KM780 RGB Mechanical keyboard with the all new Cherry-MX RGB LEDs. The G.SKILL KM780 RGB mechanical keyboard is the the first keyboard series from G.Skill and with this ...
Hardware support under Linux is far better than it ever has been in the past. These days, most things “just work” out of the box, and you probably won’t have to compile any custom kernel modules.