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After years of aggressive styling and RGB everything, peripheral and component companies seem to be settling on wood accents as the retro-inspired style of the moment. And as a gamer of a certain age, I couldn’t be happier about it. The success ofFractal’s North case seems to have kick-started the trend, and now Keychron is here with a keyboard that matches its mid-century looks quite nicely.
But the Keychron K2 HE Special Edition is much more than a (very) pretty keyboard. Its compact 75-percent layout and double-shot OSA keycaps hideGateron Double-Rail magnetic switches , which let you customize their actuation points in 0.1mm increments and assign multiple actions to a single key, based on travel depth. For gamers who love fine-tuning features, these magnetic (also known as Hall Effect) switches are excellent. And despite being linear, they’re pre-lubed and designed for stability, helping Keychron’s K2 HE feel as premium and pleasing as it looks.
Keychron will launch its K2 HE models on Kickstarter first at a $5 discount starting today. Or you can wait for full production and pick one up from Keychron directly beginning in October, starting at $130.
Design of the Keychron K2 HE
Keychron sent us the Special Edition of the K2 HE in white, but the company will offer up multiple variants. The Special Edition versions will be offered in black or white ($135 via Kickstarter or $140 in October), with rounded OSA keycaps that aren’t shine-through (limiting the RGB lighting that can escape between the keys), with metal top and bottom frame pieces, and solid-wood sides.
(Image credit: Keychron)
It’s a specific look that isn’t for everyone, but I think this is the prettiest keyboard I’ve ever tested. Even if I’m a little afraid of what the white keycaps might look like after several months of daily use. Personally, I’d probably opt for the black model.
For those who don’t dig the wood look and prefer brighter RGB lighting, the K2 HE Standard Edition ($125 via Kickstarter or $130 starting in October) features shine-through keycaps with an OEM profile, and keeps the metal frame that helps add to the premium feel. That said, the core of the keyboard’s chassis is plastic. With the wooden side panels removed from our Special Edition review unit, the top and bottom metal rails slide right off, revealing a keyboard that looks quite similar to a white version of the much cheaper Keychron K2.
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Then again, I’m sure the plastic main body improves wireless signals for the 2.4GHz and Bluetooth connection modes. Wired connectivity is of course also supported. And the company includes a decent braided cable in the box, along with a hex wrench for taking off the wood side panels and a small screwdriver for getting access to the interior of the keyboard.
There are also extra keycaps for Windows or Mac, a keycap / switch puller, and an extender for the RF dongle included. I primarily used the keyboard with the dongle plugged into one of the top ports of my PC case (as well as occasionally over Bluetooth with my laptop) and never had any issues with connectivity.
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(Image credit: Tom’s Hardware)
(Image credit: Tom’s Hardware)
There are a pair of two-level flip-up feet on the bottom for adjusting the keyboard’s rear height. And while I know you generally shouldn’t need to raise the angle of the keys while sitting at your desk, I did prefer typing with the lower of the two feet levels flipped up, lifting the back of the keyboard up just a bit.
The keyboard also has rubber pads to keep it stable on your desk. Its 2.13-pound weight also helps there, and doesn’t feel unnecessarily heavy.
As with previous K2 variants, almost all of the physical controls and connections live on the left edge. There you’ll find the USB-C port for charging or wired use and two switches – one for Windows / Android or Mac connectivity and the other for 2.4GHz, wired, or Bluetooth modes.
Keychron claims that you’ll get up to 72 hours of run time with the backlight on and 240 hours with it off, using the 4000 MAh battery. I used the keyboard for work and gaming for nearly two weeks with the backlighting on about 20% of the time (mostly at night while gaming), and never had to charge it.
(Image credit: Tom’s Hardware)
There is technically one more button, which I discovered while taking a look at the stabilizers. Clearly a bit of foam has been cut away to provide access to a reset switch, which you might need should the keyboard ever lock up or otherwise become unstable. But in my time testing it, our review unit never had any performance issues.
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The stabilizers are of the screw-in variety, mounted on the PCB (a liberal amount of glue was also used on our review unit), and they keep the bigger keys from being wobbly. The smaller keys also feel smooth and stable, thanks to the two plastic rails of Gateron’s Double-Rail switches, which seem to hold the top of the switch in place horizontally as you press it down.
(Image credit: Gateron)
I generally strongly prefer tactile (usually clicky) switches for typing, but the linear switches that Keychron uses in this keyboard are about the smoothest I’ve ever used. In fact, the lubed switches, combined with the sound-dampening foam and stabilizers, deliver a feel and sound that I found myself preferring over theCorsair K65 Plus Wireless — even after I added tactile Holy Panda X switches and better keycaps to the Corsair keyboard.
(Image credit: Tom’s Hardware)
It’s good, though, that the Gateron switches in the K2 HE feel very nice. Because while the keyboard is hot-swappable, it’s designed for magnetic switches — meaning it doesn’t support the traditional mechanical switches that dominate the market. In fact, it’s not even compatible with all ofGateron’s HE switches — only the dual-rail ones. As of this writing, the company has two dual-rail HE switches, and both are linear. It may be anathema to most serious gamers, but the clicky, tactile switch fan in me is sad that I can’t drop something tactile and noisy into this otherwise excellent keyboard.
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