As someone who’s looking to to get into the hobby, I’m curious to hear if there are any recommendations for budget friendly mechanical keyboards. I had/have a Corsair cherry red mechanical keyboard that I used probably around 10 years ago at this point when I was into gaming, but now I’d be looking for something a bit more refined, and possibly vintage as I quite enjoy using old tech. Any suggestions? I’m in Europe if that matters at all.

  • bluGill@fedia.io
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    2 months ago

    Are you looking to get into it because you want a good keyboard that feels good; or do you want to get into it because you like the idea of weird layouts, building your own keyboard, trying different switches, weird color schemes, custom key shapes, or all the other interesting but not typing things you can do. Nothing wrong with that second group, even though you can probably tell from my tone that I don’t see the point myself (if this is you I can’t give good advice so stop reading).

  • capicva [null/void]@hexbear.net
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    2 months ago

    If you want to dip a whole foot you could buy a hot swappable PCB and case to experiment with switches and keycaps. It’s probably not cheaper than a Keychron, but it could be give you more options to explore. I’ve built two Nyquist’s from keebio and a handwired Alice: each has cost less than $100. My first Nyquist is still the cheapest of the three and my daily driver; it replaced a Gigabyte with Cherry reds…

  • sparky1337@ttrpg.network
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    2 months ago

    Take a look at Keychron. They have a lot to offer for around your budget and they go on sale frequently.

    Are you looking to be able to swap switches out? If so you will need to find hot swappable switches.

    If you care about backlighting they might be a little more expensive. But Keychron is reasonable. I’ve had their K2 for years and it has a better feel in it vs Corsair or Razer stuff in my opinion.

  • WolfLink@sh.itjust.works
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    2 months ago

    I’d recommend looking for keyboards with hot-swappable switches. They may be more expensive up front, but they are repairable so they will be much more cost effective in the long term. Plus there are fun things you can do like trying out different switches or even mix-and-matching different types.

    I usually have a key fail about once a year or so. For a keyboard without hot swappable switches that’s a new keyboard each time one key fails (assuming it’s a key that’s important, which it usually is - keys you use more frequently are more likely to fail sooner). Keys are like $1 a pop (although you usually have to buy them in bulk).

    I used to buy the Corsair keyboard for like $50 each. I switched to a $150 keyboard with hot swappable switches. I’ve had my keyboard for about 5 years now and I think I’ve replaced 3 keys.

    • europa@lemmy.ml
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      2 months ago

      Out of interest, were keyboards that had “a key fail about once a year or so” all Corsairs?

      • WolfLink@sh.itjust.works
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        2 months ago

        I think it was Coolermaster actually. But the brand of keyboard isn’t super important because they all use the same brand of switches (Cherry MX). I’m now using different switches (Hako) but I don’t think the failure rate is really any different.