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14,522
4.3 out of 5 stars

Logitech G915 TKL Gaming Keyboard

$117.99
$165.99 29% off Reference Price
Condition: New
Color: Black
Size: TKL
Style: Wireless
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Top positive review
4 people found this helpful
Great gaming keyboard with weak shift key
By mcgees on Reviewed in the United States on January 27, 2025
Keyboard Super Review (gaming and basic computing perspective) Logitech G915 TKL: The keys on this board are lightweight, which is a selling point. I have large man hands scuffed up from working outdoors with the lifelong dexterity of a computer gamer -- yet the lighter keys can be easier to counter strafe in FPS games. The layout of the board feels natural and I do not misfire keys. I immediately played very well with this keyboard. Compared to the Corsair K65 with its instant activation, I game much better on this keyboard. My criticism is the Shift key, a common button for games, is a wide key but supported like it is a single wide key, unlike the rest of these keyboards which reinforce the shift key. This can be frustrating when toggling sprint in a game like Tarkov. Corsair K65 65%: (OPX Switches, PBT Double-Shot Keycaps) The switches are very easy to activate, there is no wiggle room, as with other switches/keyboards, they will activate and reset with little distance before the switch can be triggered again. This can take some getting used to for twitch competitive gaming. My main criticism is the size. I ordered the 75% for the Function Keys although it has different switches. If you dont use those readily then the small size of this is a boon. The small size takes a bit getting used to, for better and worse, as its very nice to have page up/down so close to the arrow keys, etc. Also, this keyboard is FUN to use, I want to press the keys; despite buying several keyboards to test, I am not a keyboard/switch fetishist either. The size is great if you dont need function keys. Corsair K65 75%: (PBT Dye-Sub Keycaps, Pre-Lubricated MLX Red Linear Switches) The prelubed switches are amazing; I don't know why more keyboards come this way (it is a lot of work to lube them yourself). If you are partial to buttery sounding/feeling switches then this is a good contender. The switch activation point is ideal for my crack FPS playstyle. The bluetooth and wireless dongle are useful for playing on the TV. The sound knob is not easy to turn and is even more difficult to grab with the Home key right next to it. This is my overall favorite keyboard and what I use for computing and gaming. Sadly, it is my least favorite keyboard aestetically, from keycaps to backlight effects. Ducky One 3 TKL: (Double Shot PBT, Cherry MX Red) This might be my favorite keyboard. The switches have a bit of give before activation which is a concern for my precise FPS gaming playstyle--I am not as confident when a key will trigger compared to some other boards. This is understandable, the Ducky is not marketed as a gaming keyboard; which might also be why it is my favorite to use for typing/word processing. The Corsair, for comparison, has no give and trigger with the slightest force. Maybe its my past habit of using keyboards but I like to put a little weight down on the keys, especially when strafing in games or waiting to press a key. Somewhat unrelated, this keyboard was missing a few keycaps but Ducky mailed me the missing caps ASAP. tldr: Not the best keyboard for freak FPS gaming, short of that it is tied with Corsair K65, with difference being when you like the key to trigger (a little give with Ducky or instantly with K65). Might also be worth noting I am typing a lot of reviews with this keyboard. Logitech G413 TKL: Amazon cancelled my order of this, probably because they doubled the price after I purchased it. Unfortunate because one of my past favorite gaming keyboards was a similar Logitech, which I gifted to my sister. Das Keyboard 6 Professional: (Tactile Cherry MX Brown Switches) This was my old keyboard. It is very disappointing. It is incredibly overpriced. The caps are not PBT (newer, nicer key cap plastic tech). I lubed the switches myself and it is slightly better. I have posted a very long review on its page. Das 4 keyboard was one of the best of its time (cat urinated on mine). I hope the future iterations will be better for Das' sake...since the rest of these boards are almost half the price and better per most metrics.
Top critical review
15 people found this helpful
A great keyboard that is misrepresented
By Matt D on Reviewed in the United States on September 15, 2020
First up, build quality is good. It feels really nice, and I'm LOVING the low profile mechanical keys. I'm bummed it doesn't have a case because it may just wind up commuting with me to work. As a keyboard I REALLY like it. The keys are dished rather than flat like some competitiors, and that is a really nice feel. Ergonomically it is really working for me. Also the Bluetooth connects REALLY fast. Impressively so. The lightspeed connection so far has been indistinguishable for me in gaming. Which may mean nothing as I don't really play competitive, twitchy online games much anymore. Yes the keyboard feels like a wired keyboard and that's better than old bluetooth keyboards I have had in the past, but that describes both bluetooth and lightspeed. In short I'm pretty hooked on this thing which has it's down side given the premium price. OK, but I gave it three stars... why? 1) It's over $200 and while it feels nice, it's basically a plastic chassis with a metal base plate and some metal or metalized plastic cladding on top. There is a well regarded similar style wireless keyboard for basically $80 that lines up pretty similar in materials. 2) There are other bluetooth boards out there with very similar build for about $80. You are paying a more than $140 premium for lightspeed and color customization. Even worse, that $80 keyboard supports being paired to three devices. This supports 1 bluetooth connection and 1 lightspeed connection. 3) I mentioned color customization in #2 there, and that is where this is supposed to shine and can fall on its face. If this feature is worth money to you, you clearly want the lighting to work how YOU want it to. And it doesn't unless you only use it via lightspeed or wired. You do that and you have all sorts of control of layout, lighting, what it does unde low battery, etc. It's pretty sweet and not to hard to get the hang of using it. BUT... If you set it up how you want and go to bluetooth mode, poof it's gone. It does what it wants. Which is not great if you are allergic to RGB clown vomit like I am. Now initially after reading up on it prior to purchase I thought Iw ould be able to set it up to say be all red when on my gaming machine via lightspeed, and all green when connected via bluetooth to my laptop. It just doesn't do that. It's not aware of the state of the connection and thus you cant do that and set up a bluetooth default and lightspeed default. But I didn't much care because the same reviews that implied you could also failed ot mention that the mode buttons are illuminated and make it really obvious. You cna control modes form teh keyboard by holding the illumination button and pressing 0-1. 8 and 9 you can set yourself. So hey.. I can jsut set 8 to be green and 9 to be red and pick which one I want on demand. No biggie, right? Wrong. See that works like you expect in lightspeed more. In bluetooth mode, no.. when you idle enough to trigger the idle mode, it engages the idle mode from the factory. Not the one you set up via lightspeed and the app. This is basically breathing, dimming blue. And when you start typing it goes back to the right color though, right? NO! it goes back to factory default mode, solid bright blue. Paused to read an email for thirty second? Your board is back to blue mode and screw you that's why. Ok, this can't be right so I poke around more. What you can do is use the on board storage. If I do that AND configure 8 and 9 to be things I like in bluetooth mode I CAN get teh following behavior. lets say 8 is green and 9 is red. I go to bluetooth, and it stays in whatever mode I was in in lighting. If I hit brightness-8 it is now my custom all green setting. It idles and it goes breathing dimmed blue, BUT if I start typing again it goes back to my custom green setting. I can live with this. However, you know when I said light speed mode was perfect? Yeah.. when you tuern on on board memory, it is not perfect. That disables your control of idle and low power lighting configs. It too will no go to dim blue breathing mode when idle. I can live with this because that wasn't a killer feature for me, but It's a $200+ keyboard it'd be nice if it worked well, and that could be a killer feature for YOU. If anyone can tell me I'm just missing the right way to do it, I'll gladly update my review and bump it at least one star. ETA: Having lived with this keyboard for a while now, I still like. One non-obvious good thing I have come to appreciate is that it has an off switch. This makes regularly cleaning it much easier than with your typical wired keyboard or wireless keyboard with no off switch.

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