![]() You don't have to install Corsair's iCue software to gain access to a lot of the effects, with keyboard shortcuts (Fn plus the number keys selecting colour patterns) and the iCue control wheel affording control over the intensity. This new engine supports a native polling rate of 4,000Hz, although the benefit of this isn't obvious, and by default it is set at the more standard 1,000Hz anyway. After a week of use though, it feels incredible to work and play with.Īt the backend you have Corsair Axon Hyper-Processing Technology doing the grunt work of actually keeping the keyboard up and running. This is a sensitive keyboard, and needs to be treated as such. I found myself watching my fingers in games as I turned left and right without realising I'd actually started pushing down on the keys. ![]() If those figures don't mean much to you, they're very sensitive. These switches feel great for typing, with a 1mm actuation point and 45g actuation force, bottoming out at 3.2mm. It's worth noting from the outset that the OPX switches are still digital units, not the variable analogue type that can be found in the likes of the Wooting keyboards, which can detect how far down the key is pressed and respond by turning harder (for example). As for the switches themselves, they are Corsair's new OPX optical-Mechanical switches.
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