

Your fingers will fly over these switches, a fact that’s good for gaming but somewhat problematic for actual typing-even a feather-light touch can accidentally trigger a keypress. (I say semi-proprietary because you can find the same design under the name MX Silver from other manufacturers.) The MX Speed switch is a linear design, but has even less resistance than longtime gaming favorite Cherry Reds. It keeps other features we loved from Corsair’s keyboards though, including the volume roller and media keys in the upper left, plus a generous rubberized wrist rest that’s more comfortable than it looks.Īnd it’s worth calling out Corsair’s semi-proprietary Cherry MX Speed switch, too. For keyboard try to assign to any keys then save it. If looks matter to you, you can’t do better than the K95.Ĭorsair’s also slimmed down the old K90 a bit, scraping two columns of macro keys off the left side for a much more manageable desk footprint. At the upper right side of Synapse page, Click KEY BINDS + (click at + sign) Then choose your device to bind your macro you just created. Most of its appeal is purely aesthetic, with some of the best RGB backlighting I’ve seen on any keyboard, plus an ostentatious and purely decorative light ribbon stretched across the upper edge. Put that way, the K95 RGB Platinum seems like an absurd luxury-and it is.
