for that price, I'd say there are too many corners being cut. For 350 I'd require proper foam, pre-lubed switches (I mean you sell the keyboard with linears by default ffs), stabs, full aluminum body and top notch keycaps. If not doubleshot, at least high quality.
@@Arithryka I'm not gonna lie dude, 50 gets me doubleshot keycaps on hotswap. PCB may be crap, software may be total cancer, but the basic idea is totally feasible. This is just highway robbery on par woth Logitech's keyboards. $350? That buys a looooot of keyboard. You could have your pick of most aluminum gasket cases, foam, switches. Hell, you could have most any keycaps unless you decided you wanted Cyrillic cyberspace alphas lol.
@@techmad8204 Low-profile keyboards are trendy lately (also see Work Louder as a prime example), but also retro/nostalgic minimalist tech brands have been popping up like crazy.
I mean, so what? Any product for the consumer market has to look for certain fulcrums to leverage. But it doesn't matter if somebody'll like it, and I like the design. I'd only not like it if the product release is a scam or something. Edit: But I guess I just share a different tolerance for 'thoughtful design'. To be fair, there is definitely room to improve at that price, I agree with that. But the design goal for something 'trendy' doesn't seem bad.
@@drill_fiend1097 to be fair, they only helped design it, like the nothing phone 1 and playdate console. im sure they didnt realize they were designing for a grifter.
@@yeezet4592 yeah that makes sense, hard to justify the price by saying "we charge more because we haven't figured out how to assemble them efficiently" as is the problem with most first iteration products. It's tough breaking even I get it but as a consumer that price point is not it for me lol
@EaGilgamesh I definitely agree. I don't think it's really fair for the price when unicomps are less than half the price, and you can get ergonomic keyboard at the same price which reduce rsi
@@yeezet4592 That issue should be fixed after finding investors and looking around manufacturers. Make no mistake, there will be buyers for a product like this, i don't doubt that at all, I just hope they figure it out because I'd like to own this keyboard but 300+$ is far too much to risk problems with first iteration tech products.
appreciate the thoughtful review and genuine criticism! I think in seeing products like this, it’s hard to know what kind of individual is designing it and what the aim is. From the outside looking in, I’d not think there was much of a market for a rather expensive low profile keyboard, but if such a market existed, I’d expect it to be populated by slightly more discerning individuals (such as yourself). If so, I’d expect more attention to detail (like better prelubed stabilizers, keycap quality / compatibility, etc.). I’m pretty strictly in the full travel MX switches camp (both for feel and compatibility), so I feel out of place trying to speak to what folks expect from this.
I can chime in as someone who daily drives a low profile keyboard, and has for years. Many people inaccurately think that these should be geared for travel, or to sit on a Mac/laptop instead of using the normal keyboard. That simply isn't the case, and is why a lot of these products don't do as well as they potentially could. The majority of the market is geared toward cheap, light low profile boards built for "travel" that rarely happens. Instead, they should be focusing on just making a very high end board and good typing experience that people will daily drive. I think of it as a bit of a mirror to the SFF PC case market, where you're going to have less people buying overall, but who don't mind paying higher than average prices for something that's good quality. It's really not that different from what people are looking for in the 65-75% keyboard market, just with a lower profile. Gasket mount or something similar, good switch choices, hot swappable, 2.4g and BT, good battery life, good stabs, customizeable RGB, sound dampening layers, good build quality, etc. There are only a handful of low profile boards available that fit even this basic criteria which can be found on $75 regular keyboards, which is weird. It's almost like a self fulfilling prophecy: They make shitty low end low profile boards because it's a smaller market, then the market continues to stay small because the offerings are terrible, rinse and repeat. The new low-profile Iqunix Magi65 is superior to this board in every way, imo, and it's considerably cheaper. There are some good options out there, but not all that many.
If I had to guess then I'd say the stabilizer wasn't lubed because all the common switch lubes we use are PFAS or "forever chemicals" in other words, and the manufacturer of this board tried to give an environmentally friendly vibe.
@@Blacksadify appreciate the response, and totally track that what you’re sharing makes sense! To clarify, when I said full-travel, I was referring to the travel distance of the key press. Standard Cherry MX switches have a 4 mm travel to bottom out. From a quick google, choc switches have a travel of about 3 mm. Agree that for those that like a low profile board, it shouldn’t be exclusively limited to lightweight / lower quality feeling boards. I was just saying for myself, I like a longer travel switch.
@@ImOnMy116 Oh, I see what you're saying. I misunderstood. Yeah, I could see that being a point of contention if you're used to a longer travel time on keystrokes. I've used LP keyboards for long enough now that it's just second nature having shorter travel distance.
As not a brit, I'm proud of my country (the whole world minus USA) and stood proud for out anthem). Yes, our anthem has a single line in it: A L U M I N I U M
I think the problems we see here is the challenge, that new companies that wants to do hardware face, is that if you don't already have a foot in the market. Manufactures will charge you more than they do for well-established companies like Logitech, Razer, Apple, etc. It feels like they had a vision but couldn't achieve it to its fullest. This also reflects on the price compared to the material and the lack of quality assurance on some aspects-as well as the keycaps which just _seem_ cheap. It makes it obvious on where they spent their money; and I think they chose wisely, considering their situation. But this is just a hunch based on my own experience, working at a company who also deliver their own hardware. We haven't been able to upgrade the design without a huge payout. And the one's it's going to hurt the most, is the end-consumer that will feel they didn't get what they paid for.
half way in, the vibe i'm getting is sadly style over substance. they wish to *look* utilitarian but this is not the same as actually _being_ utilitarian, and that's rather frustrating.
While I'm a bit upset with how this keyboard is priced for what it offers, it's still interesting enough for me to consider it as my next keyboard purchase now that I've grown tired of using my G915 TKL (practically any boutique LP keyboard is now able to beat that thing). Hopefully future iterations and manufacturing steps can help make it more worth its asking price because this keyboard already provides a strong base to build from
i don't know why i am keep watching videos of such keyboards. you video is well made and well shot. it is not my problem. whenever i watch videos of such keyboards i find stuff i don't like that are basically the fact that the keyboard is not ortholinear and staggered. unfortunately there is no market incentive for someone to build such board for us. i know there are ones. basically whenever i am watching this videos i am a sucker for the design aesthetic but end up wanting more in terms of usability.
I loved the concept, but it seems unfinished. The M Key, the lettering, and the rattling in each key are unacceptable. If I were to buy, I would replace the keycaps for sure.
Got one too, usually I make my own keyboards but this one looked so cool I wanted to give a try on fully-made niche keybs with it. But on the first time using it I was SO disappointed! You pointed out every single flaw this keyboard has. Plus the space bar feels kind of mushy. For this price point I'd expect a keyboard equivalent to your modding result...
Ouch, glad I wait for this one😅. I REALLY, REALLY like the design, not boring and also not over the top. But my instinct also tell me that this is their first custom keyboard, and hardware is not easy... Hopefully the maker continue to refine his next keyboard...
Such a pleasure watching another video of yours - quality and style never fail to deliver. As for the keyboard - absolutely agree with you - such a good attempt, and the looks are so appealing, but it's a little bit let down by keycaps and sound profile, combined with that price...I sincerely wish they are able to iterate and produce high quality stuff, and people reward it through sales - the world is so much more interesting with products like these than without them.
its been a year since i backed the nomad e, if it comes out like this I'm gonna cry and get my money back. IF I see that raised M one more time I think I will have to admit myself into the psych ward
to be honest, looks like the the lofree flow is much better than this keyboard, I mean you when you talk about LOW PROFILE, you'd want your keeb to be a low-profile as possible, but this thing is just putting low profile switches and keycaps onto a damn high profile case
I was really rooting for this board when it first was announced. Shame to see it didn’t quite hit the mark. Hopefully a mark ii is on the horizon with some refinements.
Would have been nice to see some UV printing for a legends too, that black outline really makes the whole board feel a little cheaper than it probably should be.
odd choice, the product owner designed the character keys to be at a lower elevation than the ancillary keys. wouldn't you normally want the alphabet keys to be raised and more prominent than the ancillary keys? Also a right side with no keys seems counter to the compact key design of the whole keyboard.
Receipts can't be recycled. So it's an interesting approach to include the manual printed on a long-ass receipt when leaning into being environmentally conscious for packaging.
This is the opposite to what is missing from the market: a premium, backlit, proprietary USB/wireless lounge keyboard that has a quality trackpad and enough edge to prevent accidental keystrike plus well placed media keys and an additional mouse click key on the opposite side to the trackpad. See the discontinued Logitech K830 and thats where the gap in the market is.
I'm absolutely not into custom and specialized keyboards and stuff but nice review. l liked the intro music :) Two things bug me with this keyboard though - the knob is hideous imho and also bad for transportation. I very much prefer a roller like on the Logi G915. Also the lack of backlighting is a no-no for me - I don't need any of the unicorn vomit stuff but just a simple subtle one ad on my Thinkpad is is a must have.
I really like the size and design and I think I would have got on particularly well with the raised modifier keys. I'm also a huge fan of anything using recycled materials. But it's a shame about its quality and cheap feel. And don't like that you could accidentally pair to another device at any moment 🤣
I love your production quality! Everything feels very intentional and thoughtful in your video, and your notes on the product were perceptive and also balanced. I can’t compliment the video enough, excellent job!
Since you mentioned Sinclair I'm getting strong QL vibes. Can the version 2 have Microdrives? Or at least a couple of SD card slots for the modern equivalent? Also receipt paper can't easily be recycled to my knowledge, the thermal "ink" in the paper causes a problem.
I did end up picking up this keyboard right when they opened pre-orders, and haven't loved the typing experience on it. I'm curious if you feel like the mods and sunset key switches made a noticeable enough impact for you in terms of sound and feel to justify the additional investment?
@@CheeseTurbulence dang… that’s a bummer to hear. I’m gonna give some modding on it a go. I think if this board was like… half the price, I wouldn’t be so bummed about the typing experience.
@@CheeseTurbulence finally got around to making the modifications, and although still very imperfect, I do enjoy using the keyboard much more than when I bought it. I also added some foam into the spacebar which helped a decent amount with how bad it sounded out of the box
Wow pretty uncanny video as I have also recently received my Altar 1 and was quite literally looking to get those kailh choc sunset switches. Enjoyed the review and can agree with most points. And yeah for the price I wish it was a little more refined so I didn’t have to upgrade certain aspects of it but I would appreciate any info on those sunset switches. From what I hear they are very good. Thanks.
I really like the Sunsets, they are definitely an upgrade to the stock reds but the difference, at least in terms of sound, isn't as big as I hoped (the foam does a lot more). But the feel is much better (if you like tactile's).
@@CheeseTurbulence yeah, I had a similar experience with sound. The biggest difference I found was using thin PE foam (the kind of thing some electronics like TVs are wrapped in as an inner layer of packaging). I put that between the switches and hotswap PCB, and that really improved things. That was on a Typeractive Corne, for what it’s worth. The Twilights also made a huge difference in sound, and feel really good IMO.
@@CheeseTurbulenceyeah gonna have to decide which switch to go with. Leaning more towards a tactile feel with this board though. Also, definitely gonna throw some foam in as well to help the sound, as lubing the stabilizers helped but there’s still more to gain in terms of sound by doing that. Thanks again.
Thanks for shedding light on this new brand but sadly it only shows this product has horrible QC. Id be willing to take a risk on this if it was less than £100- ditch the fancy materials and price tag
I'm quite happy with mine. not a fan of Linear Switches though. That said, they just released a new firmware today that among other things, sorts out the oddity that was the pair button being active when using it in USB mode.
OK, they get many, many points for actually supporting an ISO layout from day one - however, they managed to fk that up by not _actually_ having the keys in the proper places (@, \, " etc). Kind of feels like they did half a job there, just like using transfers on the keycaps instead of using a proper double-shot process. And what the hell is up with that daft oversized escape key, and the Fn key where Ctrl should be? And what about the parity in US versus UK pricing? The damn thing's made in the UK, there's absolutely no excuse for that. It's a cool idea, and they were perilously close to getting it 100% right, but then it was Friday afternoon and they all went home. At these prices, it's a flat "nope" when even Keychron manage to get all these things right (sometimes).
Would also prefer if the rotary were magnetic so it could be removed as I imagine it could be damaged when traveling and it allows for you to custom the knob to your liking
I'll stick with my Nuphy Air 60 V2 for 1/4 this price and much more modability and very nice build quality for a low profile small layout - I can live without the Function row and have 75/96 layouts in Halo, Gem, and Air as well as some other brands, but Nuphy is by far my favorite for hardware, not so much software.
I have to confess, the big Nope from me is the high and general poo'ness of the volume control. Also, I am a fan of USB, so it would be quite annoying having USB and Device 1 share the same 'position' regardless of the pairing button being a bit over eger. Maybe an Altar II is what I need to wait for.
If I am allowed to redesign the keyboard, with chips becoming smaller (nano), I would make it a Minicomputer by attaching a CPU and a Display Port. Only problem is how much RAM it should have when integrated?. Having said that, ASUS NUC (cheapest is around 200 dollars) has almost everything and wasting money and investing on a British keyboard is not worth.
i'm not a amused by the missing HOME, END, PG-UP, PG-DOWN, DEL keys on the right hand side (i need those!), not to mention how cheap black border of the legends look on all the keys. also all the keys rattle like a cheap keyboard. it's way too expensive. the only think it has going for it is the tactile difference between the F and number rows and maybe the arrow keys
For $350 I expect more. Feels like they're capitalizing on the (extremely nice) design and aesthetics and not following up in the build quality department. I'd much rather have a Flow84 or a NuPhy for less. The printed keycaps on a $350 keeb is atrocious. It feels like they're trying a Teenage Engineering approach to design and branding, but not following through on the quality and functionality. That said, I do like the trend of putting designers in the drivers seat (a la teenage engineering) and making gorgeous products, they just have to keep the engineering up to the same standard.
This keyboard looked so nice in the renders on their website, but the physical product is so far off from that. Also, no one seems to mention how the colored piece of the rotary knob is clearly red instead of the orange in the renders and in their branding. That, and of course the poor quality keycaps, would really bug me as it doesn't match at all.
It's hard to unsee that misaligned M once you notice
ugh my OCD
looks like a printing technology supplier failure..😅
6:33, i feel if you stare at it long enough, most of the letters feel misaligned
V2 fix
Or. Mmmmmmmmmm that’s a ʕ ͠°ʖ̫°͠ ʔ⸝^nice! Keyboard
5:40 "It's nothing outrageous..." *Zooms in on an atrocity*
That is horrifying.
Yeah I'll admit, that statement doesn't quite reflect the "M" 🫣
@@CheeseTurbulence why it is misaligned?
@@HarishBabuM shitty manufacturing
I feel like at that price, keycaps should've been doubleshot.
for that price, I'd say there are too many corners being cut. For 350 I'd require proper foam, pre-lubed switches (I mean you sell the keyboard with linears by default ffs), stabs, full aluminum body and top notch keycaps. If not doubleshot, at least high quality.
Painted keys are honestly unacceptable past the $50 price point.
@@kenshinbattousai374 $50 is dirt cheap if you consider how much inflation we've had in the past several years (at least in the USA)
those letters are going to wear away in no time
@@Arithryka I'm not gonna lie dude, 50 gets me doubleshot keycaps on hotswap. PCB may be crap, software may be total cancer, but the basic idea is totally feasible. This is just highway robbery on par woth Logitech's keyboards. $350? That buys a looooot of keyboard. You could have your pick of most aluminum gasket cases, foam, switches. Hell, you could have most any keycaps unless you decided you wanted Cyrillic cyberspace alphas lol.
Like the general look of it, but *hate* the font on the number keycaps.
it's my favourite part :)
@@lels3618same
It’s basically a rip of the teenage engieering fonts on the OP1 hence I like it
It's just an extremely terrible idea to make the numbers be a different font from the rest.
I actually kinda like it 🙂
This keyboard definitely feels like it's capitalizing on a trend, and hiding a lack of thoughtful design behind nostalgic branding.
That's cos it is.
What trend?
@@techmad8204 Low-profile keyboards are trendy lately (also see Work Louder as a prime example), but also retro/nostalgic minimalist tech brands have been popping up like crazy.
@@techmad8204industrial design like teenage engineering or nothing phones
I mean, so what? Any product for the consumer market has to look for certain fulcrums to leverage. But it doesn't matter if somebody'll like it, and I like the design. I'd only not like it if the product release is a scam or something.
Edit: But I guess I just share a different tolerance for 'thoughtful design'. To be fair, there is definitely room to improve at that price, I agree with that. But the design goal for something 'trendy' doesn't seem bad.
I'm surprised teenage engineering haven't realised a keyboard for all the hipster drips
Don't give them ideas
@@akr12877 😆:
Should have done that instead of that joke of an overhyped AI speaker with tiny display.
@@drill_fiend1097 to be fair, they only helped design it, like the nothing phone 1 and playdate console. im sure they didnt realize they were designing for a grifter.
@@akr12877 agreed, it would probably cost 1000$ if they make one!
Fantastic video!
That keyboard should be around the 140-160$ish price point, 349 is insanity
Thank you! 🙂
Assembled in the UK I guess.
@@yeezet4592 yeah that makes sense, hard to justify the price by saying "we charge more because we haven't figured out how to assemble them efficiently" as is the problem with most first iteration products. It's tough breaking even I get it but as a consumer that price point is not it for me lol
@EaGilgamesh I definitely agree. I don't think it's really fair for the price when unicomps are less than half the price, and you can get ergonomic keyboard at the same price which reduce rsi
@@yeezet4592 That issue should be fixed after finding investors and looking around manufacturers. Make no mistake, there will be buyers for a product like this, i don't doubt that at all, I just hope they figure it out because I'd like to own this keyboard but 300+$ is far too much to risk problems with first iteration tech products.
I love the riff deadthcore at the beggining of the video bro
Yeah that djenty kinda sounds is sick
OMG that is the sickest keybaord ever seen, I hope there could be a military-green-color option
appreciate the thoughtful review and genuine criticism! I think in seeing products like this, it’s hard to know what kind of individual is designing it and what the aim is. From the outside looking in, I’d not think there was much of a market for a rather expensive low profile keyboard, but if such a market existed, I’d expect it to be populated by slightly more discerning individuals (such as yourself). If so, I’d expect more attention to detail (like better prelubed stabilizers, keycap quality / compatibility, etc.). I’m pretty strictly in the full travel MX switches camp (both for feel and compatibility), so I feel out of place trying to speak to what folks expect from this.
I can chime in as someone who daily drives a low profile keyboard, and has for years.
Many people inaccurately think that these should be geared for travel, or to sit on a Mac/laptop instead of using the normal keyboard. That simply isn't the case, and is why a lot of these products don't do as well as they potentially could. The majority of the market is geared toward cheap, light low profile boards built for "travel" that rarely happens. Instead, they should be focusing on just making a very high end board and good typing experience that people will daily drive.
I think of it as a bit of a mirror to the SFF PC case market, where you're going to have less people buying overall, but who don't mind paying higher than average prices for something that's good quality.
It's really not that different from what people are looking for in the 65-75% keyboard market, just with a lower profile. Gasket mount or something similar, good switch choices, hot swappable, 2.4g and BT, good battery life, good stabs, customizeable RGB, sound dampening layers, good build quality, etc.
There are only a handful of low profile boards available that fit even this basic criteria which can be found on $75 regular keyboards, which is weird. It's almost like a self fulfilling prophecy: They make shitty low end low profile boards because it's a smaller market, then the market continues to stay small because the offerings are terrible, rinse and repeat.
The new low-profile Iqunix Magi65 is superior to this board in every way, imo, and it's considerably cheaper. There are some good options out there, but not all that many.
If I had to guess then I'd say the stabilizer wasn't lubed because all the common switch lubes we use are PFAS or "forever chemicals" in other words, and the manufacturer of this board tried to give an environmentally friendly vibe.
@@Blacksadify appreciate the response, and totally track that what you’re sharing makes sense! To clarify, when I said full-travel, I was referring to the travel distance of the key press. Standard Cherry MX switches have a 4 mm travel to bottom out. From a quick google, choc switches have a travel of about 3 mm. Agree that for those that like a low profile board, it shouldn’t be exclusively limited to lightweight / lower quality feeling boards. I was just saying for myself, I like a longer travel switch.
@@ImOnMy116 Oh, I see what you're saying. I misunderstood. Yeah, I could see that being a point of contention if you're used to a longer travel time on keystrokes. I've used LP keyboards for long enough now that it's just second nature having shorter travel distance.
@ImOnMy116 Thank you as always! 🙂
F* as soon as I saw that price I spilled coffee on my new keyboard, LMFAO.
I’m glad I’m not the only one constantly thwarted by that Pair button 🤦♂️
As not a brit, I'm proud of my country (the whole world minus USA) and stood proud for out anthem).
Yes, our anthem has a single line in it:
A L U M I N I U M
Love the rock song on the intro. Didn’t heard about this board. They should paired with FNkeycaps for the low profile keycaps.
Thank you as always! 🙂
I think the problems we see here is the challenge, that new companies that wants to do hardware face, is that if you don't already have a foot in the market. Manufactures will charge you more than they do for well-established companies like Logitech, Razer, Apple, etc.
It feels like they had a vision but couldn't achieve it to its fullest. This also reflects on the price compared to the material and the lack of quality assurance on some aspects-as well as the keycaps which just _seem_ cheap. It makes it obvious on where they spent their money; and I think they chose wisely, considering their situation.
But this is just a hunch based on my own experience, working at a company who also deliver their own hardware. We haven't been able to upgrade the design without a huge payout. And the one's it's going to hurt the most, is the end-consumer that will feel they didn't get what they paid for.
That's my suspicion as well, I have no experience in the hardware field, so I didn't want to make any unqualified assumptions.
half way in, the vibe i'm getting is sadly style over substance. they wish to *look* utilitarian but this is not the same as actually _being_ utilitarian, and that's rather frustrating.
And Embarrassing if it comes from the country that birthed the arts & crafts movement
For a keyboard that expensive … the screen printing actually lining up would be nice ya know ?
While I'm a bit upset with how this keyboard is priced for what it offers, it's still interesting enough for me to consider it as my next keyboard purchase now that I've grown tired of using my G915 TKL (practically any boutique LP keyboard is now able to beat that thing). Hopefully future iterations and manufacturing steps can help make it more worth its asking price because this keyboard already provides a strong base to build from
This is friggen beautiful. Great video as always.
Thank you! 🙂
i don't know why i am keep watching videos of such keyboards. you video is well made and well shot. it is not my problem. whenever i watch videos of such keyboards i find stuff i don't like that are basically the fact that the keyboard is not ortholinear and staggered. unfortunately there is no market incentive for someone to build such board for us. i know there are ones. basically whenever i am watching this videos i am a sucker for the design aesthetic but end up wanting more in terms of usability.
I loved the concept, but it seems unfinished. The M Key, the lettering, and the rattling in each key are unacceptable. If I were to buy, I would replace the keycaps for sure.
Thank you for this video, which alerted me to the existence of the KBD Fans Solar
Got one too, usually I make my own keyboards but this one looked so cool I wanted to give a try on fully-made niche keybs with it. But on the first time using it I was SO disappointed! You pointed out every single flaw this keyboard has. Plus the space bar feels kind of mushy. For this price point I'd expect a keyboard equivalent to your modding result...
Amazing review, thanks man!!
Thank you! 🙂
You get a "Like" because you pronounced Aluminium correctly. Thank you.
Ouch, glad I wait for this one😅. I REALLY, REALLY like the design, not boring and also not over the top. But my instinct also tell me that this is their first custom keyboard, and hardware is not easy...
Hopefully the maker continue to refine his next keyboard...
The intro of this video (or channel? I'm new here) immediately gets my interest
I like the mac layout, FN-key on the left and X-Key aligned with the space key.
Such a pleasure watching another video of yours - quality and style never fail to deliver. As for the keyboard - absolutely agree with you - such a good attempt, and the looks are so appealing, but it's a little bit let down by keycaps and sound profile, combined with that price...I sincerely wish they are able to iterate and produce high quality stuff, and people reward it through sales - the world is so much more interesting with products like these than without them.
Thank you so much! 🙂
I like the synthwave. It gives this 80s/90s vibe.
For this kind of price you absolutely should expect better quality. The alignment of the lettering on the keycaps alone would warrant a full refund.
We need a worklouder Nomad E keyboard review!!
Didn't expect a very djentleman intro but im all for it!
edit: I just noticed all those band names lmao, cheeky
its been a year since i backed the nomad e, if it comes out like this I'm gonna cry and get my money back. IF I see that raised M one more time I think I will have to admit myself into the psych ward
to be honest, looks like the the lofree flow is much better than this keyboard, I mean you when you talk about LOW PROFILE, you'd want your keeb to be a low-profile as possible, but this thing is just putting low profile switches and keycaps onto a damn high profile case
£349 lol.
On first blush, I figured it'd be costing around $250. At a $350 price point, build quality/QA has to be practically flawless.
Thanks for sharing your in depth experience. I really appreciate it. My favorite part is definitely the packaging.
Thank you for watching! 🙂
I was really rooting for this board when it first was announced. Shame to see it didn’t quite hit the mark. Hopefully a mark ii is on the horizon with some refinements.
Would have been nice to see some UV printing for a legends too, that black outline really makes the whole board feel a little cheaper than it probably should be.
For seeing it in person, those are the cheapest keycaps I’ve ever seen.
odd choice, the product owner designed the character keys to be at a lower elevation than the ancillary keys. wouldn't you normally want the alphabet keys to be raised and more prominent than the ancillary keys? Also a right side with no keys seems counter to the compact key design of the whole keyboard.
Nice vid mate
Thank you as always 🙂
I think you might just be in a parallel universe while low profile keyboard never hype at all in our timeline.
Thats the problem with expensive stuff is that it needs to be perfect to justify the price. No one complains about a $30 BT keyboard's pairing switch.
"Bullet for my keyboard" hell yeah
I just wish Wooting keyboards looked more like this. Then it would actually be the final keyboard for me.
Great video as always!
Thank you! 🙂
1:31 Man, you spill the tea! Do you remember her - My Name is Boxxy! :)
Receipts can't be recycled. So it's an interesting approach to include the manual printed on a long-ass receipt when leaning into being environmentally conscious for packaging.
Didn’t think about that aspect, thanks for pointing that out! 😮
I could see in the very first shot that the kay markings are labels which will eventually rub off, especially the WASD.
The titles were hilarious for the emo keyboard!
love that intro music
Imagine if Braun designed a low profile keyboard in 1970's. That's the keyboard this should have been at half the price.
This is the opposite to what is missing from the market: a premium, backlit, proprietary USB/wireless lounge keyboard that has a quality trackpad and enough edge to prevent accidental keystrike plus well placed media keys and an additional mouse click key on the opposite side to the trackpad. See the discontinued Logitech K830 and thats where the gap in the market is.
Idk how to describe, but this looks like a Sony camera-esque design
I'm absolutely not into custom and specialized keyboards and stuff but nice review. l liked the intro music :) Two things bug me with this keyboard though - the knob is hideous imho and also bad for transportation. I very much prefer a roller like on the Logi G915. Also the lack of backlighting is a no-no for me - I don't need any of the unicorn vomit stuff but just a simple subtle one ad on my Thinkpad is is a must have.
I really like the size and design and I think I would have got on particularly well with the raised modifier keys. I'm also a huge fan of anything using recycled materials. But it's a shame about its quality and cheap feel. And don't like that you could accidentally pair to another device at any moment 🤣
I love your production quality! Everything feels very intentional and thoughtful in your video, and your notes on the product were perceptive and also balanced. I can’t compliment the video enough, excellent job!
Thank you so much! 🙂
Since you mentioned Sinclair I'm getting strong QL vibes. Can the version 2 have Microdrives? Or at least a couple of SD card slots for the modern equivalent?
Also receipt paper can't easily be recycled to my knowledge, the thermal "ink" in the paper causes a problem.
Imagine pre-ordering and waiting for a 400$ keyboard only to listen to that kind of keycap rattle when you finally get it. It's just lazy QC
Great video here with excellent quality
Thank you! 🙂
Nice Intro soundtrack
I did end up picking up this keyboard right when they opened pre-orders, and haven't loved the typing experience on it. I'm curious if you feel like the mods and sunset key switches made a noticeable enough impact for you in terms of sound and feel to justify the additional investment?
I would say no, even with the changes the board (IMO) remains unsatisfying. 😞
@@CheeseTurbulence dang… that’s a bummer to hear. I’m gonna give some modding on it a go. I think if this board was like… half the price, I wouldn’t be so bummed about the typing experience.
@@CheeseTurbulence finally got around to making the modifications, and although still very imperfect, I do enjoy using the keyboard much more than when I bought it. I also added some foam into the spacebar which helped a decent amount with how bad it sounded out of the box
This is really cool board, minus that misaligned M...
That aside, what was that killer track in the intro?
Track from the intro: ruclips.net/video/3yQ4Lo1rXzs/видео.html
@@CheeseTurbulence Thank you so much! :3
Wow pretty uncanny video as I have also recently received my Altar 1 and was quite literally looking to get those kailh choc sunset switches. Enjoyed the review and can agree with most points. And yeah for the price I wish it was a little more refined so I didn’t have to upgrade certain aspects of it but I would appreciate any info on those sunset switches. From what I hear they are very good. Thanks.
Also consider the silent chocs from the same store, low pro kb ca. The Sunsets are good, but the Silent Twilights are even better, IMO.
@@swr410 I'm gonna have to try the Twilights as well, thank you! 🙂
I really like the Sunsets, they are definitely an upgrade to the stock reds but the difference, at least in terms of sound, isn't as big as I hoped (the foam does a lot more). But the feel is much better (if you like tactile's).
@@CheeseTurbulence yeah, I had a similar experience with sound. The biggest difference I found was using thin PE foam (the kind of thing some electronics like TVs are wrapped in as an inner layer of packaging). I put that between the switches and hotswap PCB, and that really improved things. That was on a Typeractive Corne, for what it’s worth.
The Twilights also made a huge difference in sound, and feel really good IMO.
@@CheeseTurbulenceyeah gonna have to decide which switch to go with. Leaning more towards a tactile feel with this board though. Also, definitely gonna throw some foam in as well to help the sound, as lubing the stabilizers helped but there’s still more to gain in terms of sound by doing that. Thanks again.
my partner and I both purchased this keyboard, and both of our units have defects
What kind if I may ask?😊
@@SillySolly both of our units have a space-bar defect. the space-bar doesn't depress as much as the other keys and inserts a lot of double spaces
Oh that is even worse, mine just had the raddling which at least made it "usable" 😕
I NEED THIS
the M alone would drive me insane
when you see letter M you just cant unsee it
Thanks for shedding light on this new brand but sadly it only shows this product has horrible QC. Id be willing to take a risk on this if it was less than £100- ditch the fancy materials and price tag
for a second, I read your channel's name as chinese turbulence
Great video. Can you review the Unicorne split keyboard by by Boardsource?
That's a super cool looking board, I'll put it on the list but I can't guarantee it 🙂
Thanks for suggesting it though!
Nice vid mate though. I feel like if the keys aren't going to have a uniform topography, the arrows should be higher, not lower
Thank you 🙇♂️ and agree 🙂
I'm glad y'all haven't heard about Geonworks.
I'm quite happy with mine. not a fan of Linear Switches though. That said, they just released a new firmware today that among other things, sorts out the oddity that was the pair button being active when using it in USB mode.
Saw that too, it's great that they are addressing issues. They also fixed the pairing button behaviour 💪
OK, they get many, many points for actually supporting an ISO layout from day one - however, they managed to fk that up by not _actually_ having the keys in the proper places (@, \, " etc). Kind of feels like they did half a job there, just like using transfers on the keycaps instead of using a proper double-shot process.
And what the hell is up with that daft oversized escape key, and the Fn key where Ctrl should be? And what about the parity in US versus UK pricing? The damn thing's made in the UK, there's absolutely no excuse for that.
It's a cool idea, and they were perilously close to getting it 100% right, but then it was Friday afternoon and they all went home. At these prices, it's a flat "nope" when even Keychron manage to get all these things right (sometimes).
a strong pass for me. At that price, the letters should be lasered in rather than just stickers which are not even aligned.
no travel protective case or cover? is there a full size version?
def would get a magnetic cap for the pairing button as I imagine you would pair to one device and very rarely pair to any other device
Would also prefer if the rotary were magnetic so it could be removed as I imagine it could be damaged when traveling and it allows for you to custom the knob to your liking
I'll stick with my Nuphy Air 60 V2 for 1/4 this price and much more modability and very nice build quality for a low profile small layout - I can live without the Function row and have 75/96 layouts in Halo, Gem, and Air as well as some other brands, but Nuphy is by far my favorite for hardware, not so much software.
i watched the entire video and i still want one :(((
The color scheme reminds of that of lenovo, hope they get backlight/touchid
I have to confess, the big Nope from me is the high and general poo'ness of the volume control. Also, I am a fan of USB, so it would be quite annoying having USB and Device 1 share the same 'position' regardless of the pairing button being a bit over eger. Maybe an Altar II is what I need to wait for.
Song is Ascent by Dillon Knighton
~~~~ A-lu-mi-ni-um ~~~~
The hilarious irony of Google offering to translate your comment into English.
if i could also flick the knop up and down this would be epic for on the go broadcast control.
Wonder how hard it would be to make that with off the shelf parts and 3d prints?
400 bucks for a keyboard with basically stickered on characters that you find on a 4 dollar keyboard from aliexpress is insane
before video: 🤩
after watching a whole video: ☹
Eesh, that price tag is gross
Looks nice, major M misalignment, lack of individual RGB + glow through keys, and doesn't use VIA, make this only worth $85 - $125 tops imo
If I am allowed to redesign the keyboard, with chips becoming smaller (nano), I would make it a Minicomputer by attaching a CPU and a Display Port. Only problem is how much RAM it should have when integrated?.
Having said that, ASUS NUC (cheapest is around 200 dollars) has almost everything and wasting money and investing on a British keyboard is not worth.
i'm not a amused by the missing HOME, END, PG-UP, PG-DOWN, DEL keys on the right hand side (i need those!), not to mention how cheap black border of the legends look on all the keys. also all the keys rattle like a cheap keyboard. it's way too expensive. the only think it has going for it is the tactile difference between the F and number rows and maybe the arrow keys
And since this board is from anywhere other than the US, aluminium*
Fixed it for you
There is a certain niche for products that look very cool, are pleasent to play with, but they are uncomfortable to use or borderline unfunctional.
Update: "Pairing mode now activated by a long press on the PAIR button, avoiding accidental presses"
lol that intro escalated quickly
For $350 I expect more. Feels like they're capitalizing on the (extremely nice) design and aesthetics and not following up in the build quality department. I'd much rather have a Flow84 or a NuPhy for less. The printed keycaps on a $350 keeb is atrocious. It feels like they're trying a Teenage Engineering approach to design and branding, but not following through on the quality and functionality. That said, I do like the trend of putting designers in the drivers seat (a la teenage engineering) and making gorgeous products, they just have to keep the engineering up to the same standard.
americans: "aloominum"
most other brits: "aloominium"
me, a scot: "alyouuminyum"
This keyboard looked so nice in the renders on their website, but the physical product is so far off from that. Also, no one seems to mention how the colored piece of the rotary knob is clearly red instead of the orange in the renders and in their branding. That, and of course the poor quality keycaps, would really bug me as it doesn't match at all.
Sick price and sold out