As an engineer, I’m continuously impressed with how far rtings is pushing objective testing for consumer products. Also shoutout to Anthony for loving the box jades. Easily my favorite clicky/tactile switch.
Thanks for watching and the kind words! At the end of the day, it's always about helping you as a consumer get the right and best info you need about a product!
I would strongly suggest also testing off center! Some switches are incredibly smooth straight up and down, but won‘t be as smooth when pressed off center. I know this is more of a stability problem rather than factory smooth test, but this definitely means something.
yea off center test is important reminds me about a video regarding the worst switches ever. some of them had a tendency to jam wen pressed of-center. in-case anyone is wondering pretty much all the first places were extremely old mitsumi miniature mechanical place 2
You should do more tests but with off center keypresses. Most linears feel exactly the same when testing straight on, give or take the spring and leaf properties. Off center presses are where you'll actually see switch materials and designs actually being stressed. Also if you want to make an ultimate test, you should also test the raw components and build a frankenswitch with objectively the best parts, and then use that as a reference.
what a great premise and i am very glad to see another big channel show there is a galaxy of switch types out there. I'm not too picky, I just like a distinct difference going from keyboard to keyboard; My work machine uses a Topre RGB with BKE domes, where as my game machine uses nice lite kailh box whites. The box jades annoying his coworker got a laugh from me; they are quite a bit louder.
Thanks for watching! 😄 There really are a ton of different switches out there, so we aimed to try and make it easier for people to almost know what to expect of them out of the box!
Data from LABs will always be tainted by Linus saying that couple of hundred dollars is not worth it for doing the testing properly, cant trust them anymore for numbers.
@dtemp132 I hope LTT won't compete with Rtings, I like them both. Maybe a cooperation would make happier everyone. LTT mentioned Rtings positiveley in multiple videos. 😊
Definitely would want to see housing tightness/ stem wobble in the future. Also potentially more of a sound analysis with various plate materials. Maybe frequency response?
What an amazing video yet again from Rtings! Thanks! I'm actually thinking of buying a new keyboard, so this info comes handy, even though I'm not some kind of a keyboard wizard. One suggestion: Does the feel (or scratchiness in this case) of these switches change after longer period of use? If the plastics are rubbing on each other, I would assume, that would change the feel of the switch after loooong period of time, so something to think about setting up for fun to see in the future!
Glad to hear you enjoyed the video! 😄The feel will change the more you use them and break them in, though it can take a long time to get to that point as you mentioned!
As a fellow Box Jade user, I appreciate Anthony. If he wants to be even more annoying, there exist the most amazing (and cursed) clicky switches in existence. The "Zeal Clickiez". They're at least twice as loud as the Jades, with a deeper more satisfying sound. If you want the best possible sound, remove any keyboard foam, and buy a larger, preferably metal, case to allow the sound to reverberate. The only disadvantage is that the "light" version requires as much force as the average "heavy" switch category. I'm glad someone is working on improving testing poorly understood components. You're doing great work!
Thank you for labs testing switches. I would suggest that you also document the known material and manufacturer of the switches alongside the force graphs and scratchiness measurements.
Loving the work and overview! Looks like you guys have a real knack for engineering projects and objective QA. In the consumer review space, this is truly industry-leading.
Good job, factory lube makes such a a difference, great to remove subjective testing since so many people are wrong, especially without having a wealth of experience to compare with. Even with objective testing though, it's ultimately still the users subjective preference and experience that matters most when selecting a switch. more data is more better though! I wonder how my smoothness ratings compare with your objective measurements
Been lurking around for a long time now. But here I can't contain myself and leave a comment. I'm constantly amazed at how accurately you perform testing - considering factors that really make a difference. Huge thank you for that! ❤ Regarding switches, I'd advise everyone to try pre-lubed BSUN and HMX switches - they are far superior to the 'popular' brands like Cherry, Akko, etc. My favorites are BSUN Roselle, Bunny, Akashi, HMX Cloud, and if you're on a budget: the MZ Z1 switches. All these have been easily accessible recently - lucky us! :)
I've had an acryl base like that and the switches weren't very secure in it. some were moving inside of the holes, some poped out by a millimetre. Though it will take more time, i recommend using solder to fix the switches in please and eliminate variables.
Can you guys look into laptop keyboards? Some laptops have issues where if you don't press down on the keys correctly, such as on a corner or edge, you can feel the "snap" of the key actuating but it won't actually yield a keystroke. Notable examples would be the ASUS gaming notebooks. I have some video documenting this if you need an example of what I mean, but it should be easy to check for - just slowly apply pressure to the key at various spots and see if you can get the key past that actuation point without a keystroke happening. In my experience, the keyboards where this is very easy to do I experience higher error rate in my typing, more people report keycaps falling off (Cause of bad stabilization maybe?), and many of them tend to be gaming machines. Some of them even aren't (such as some of the Dell Latitudes I tested) but I don't have a good way to quantify this per machine. Seems like you guys have the equipment to better do this than I ever could/was able to. Thanks!
I think adding the audio component was done a little early/hastily for this. A wider selection of switches should've been used to detect at what point the scratchiness factor enters into the noise level/floor of what is distinguishable for human perception, while having the test run in a quiet box that participants would reach into, so that they couldn't hear the switches but had to focus solely on the feel of them. This would additionally require a quiet room for the participants to control for exterior noise and vibrations impacting the testing. Then for the sound, participants shouldn't touch the switches at all but rather have a machine actuate them for consistent reproducible responses, and they should be listening at a set distance. I'm sure you have a weighting between the scratchy factor and audio one for the factory metric, and I think until you individually measure the perception graphs (think SPL A curve) of both, your compound score won't be accurate. It's not enough just to tweak it until it matches what the participants scored in this one test, particularly when noise floor thresholds are hit/involved. (when I say noise, I don't mean sound. I mean the point at which you can't discern from no stimulation/difference at all: the placebo point) I wanted to join rtings a few years back, I'm in the area, but covid really messed things up for me...
Ooh keyboard switches are coming?! Love it! I really need more data so I can determine which ones I need to try next :D I'm currently using pre-lubed Gateron Silent Browns, as I fell in love with these while trying out more than a hundred keyboards in South Korea's main keyboard store. Data will definitely help me put my experience with switches into something more tangible. Cheers!
Reason many went for the hearing test is because a switch may feel smooth but due to spring/contact rub sound scratchy. Early kalih switches had a lot of those issues, needless to say switches have come a long way since then.
Everyday i thank god for RTINGS and their technical reviews. Otherwise id have to rely on gamer69 who reviews based on vibes (yuck). edit: on a serious note, thank you rtings, you helped me pick the right monitor for me and your keyboard reviews are goated with the technical testing.
Oh wow, did not expect to see switches review, always seemed to subjective of a thing. That's awesome that you can find a way to help people choose the best switch for them. Going on feel ranking from an individual is a decent strategy, but its really nice to see the actual numbers too.
An interesting note for testing: I would record how a human would press different switches and record that curve. And I think this pressing curve is different with different keys because of the different resistance, but maybe can be averaged for a more human aproach. I think in real life the keys are not pressed linear like the test machine. It would be an interesting experiment. 🙂 I really appreciate the value you make with these videos. I would really enjoy working on projects you do 😊
RTINGS and Hardware Unboxed are the only sources I fully trust on this stuff. Trying to measure things with as much objectivity and hard data as possible really helps and the effort that goes into this is seriously appreciated. Hope I can pitch in more support in the future.
When I was working on developing cycling shifter buttons for feel you needed a high actuation force.... but people connected loudness to click feel. Noise blocking headphones or ear muffs threw peoples rankings way off with the switches.
Vouching for the off-center test here. Especially hitting LCTRL with a force vector that's not perpendicular to the key. I switched keyboards because of a difference in that, even though I couldn't tell the difference in normal up-down presses.
When people type, they don’t only apply axial loads to the switch (as your tester does). Humans apply lateral loads as well, and this can induce additional binding / scratchiness that manifests independently of the pure axial measurement. There are a number of different ways this could be incorporated into your testing, but going beyond pure “straight down” smoothness would be highly illuminating.
When I try a new keyboard, whether it's laptop or mechanical, I always press the keys on their side/corner to see if they are scratchy. Because when I type, I don't always press at the exact center.
Why don't you test these mini switches against a full size cherry DX-44 mounted in a IL\Happ button for a unbiased neutral control. It's not a Keyboard button but if any mini button can even get close to a full size microswitch mounted to a 2in plunger with a large spring inside it, it means its a decent enough switch.
While we catchup on the backlog of user questions from the holidays (our team was off), we're currently answering all questions via our website to ensure we don't miss any! www.rtings.com/forums
I played around a bit trying different keyboards when I "discovered" mechanical switches. Came to the conclusion I have no preference. Guess my fingers are not refined enough to care. My turtle beach membrane keyboard I got from a bargain bin feels good enough to me even compared to the much more expensive cherry switch keyboard. But I found this video of people putting so much effort into putting a objective numerical data on the scratchiness of keyboard switches amusing.
i started typing this before I have finished watching the video. I would want to know if the travel time between "home to actuation to bottom to reset to home" and their variant lengths of time between each switch could result in different noise levels or smoothness. You have a slide that shows actuation to reset, but obviously this video and its contents are about smoothness. And the video doesn't cover what i am describing.
Personally I prefer the quietest switches with the least amount of travel. I stopped using my new Logitech gaming keyboard as I hated the long switch travel time as it was delaying my relativeness. Btw I love the idea of Quickie-switches such as on Wooting's keyboards, I hope all keyboards take on this tech for all its keys but some gaming platform's, I think it was Uplay have started banning people if they detect its use as they see it as cheating. But we have always had technological variances where one user can gain advantage over the other based on the products they are able to purchase. I think its wrong to ban people especially as its likely to be a technology all the major brands will include in the near future.
I wonder how far the cheap outemu switches are from the cherry switches, currently typing on some outemu red switches and they arent too bad imo, but the WORST switches ive ever felt have to be the KRGD blue switches, truly awful feel and sound
Were these factory lubed switches? How sure are you that all these switches were "unlubed"? Factory lubed switches are way more inconsistent than if someone lubed them, and I'm surprised this wasn't highlighted in the video at all. Additionally, I understand you're trying to remove any bit of variance with the decision to not hand-lube switches, but that makes this experiment a little less meaningful since a majority of users do not use these switches straight out of the box. If you ever dedicate the crazy amount of time to hand lube these switches (good luck, lol), using the popular lubes associated with each switch would make this way more impactful.
I think you’re doing that force test too slowly, the result won’t reflect what a user would feel as they’ll be pressing the key much faster with their fingers.
"objective". imagine trusting someone who is putting switches (oil kings) that not only have polished molds/polished rails and also come factory lubed at around the same level as switches (mx blacks) which have years old, worn out molds, are so scratchy stock that they are basically 95% of the switches that people send in to get diamond polished and broken in by specific services just to be at an acceptable level of scratch. not even the best batch of MX black is anywhere near as smooth as the average oil king.
As an engineer, I’m continuously impressed with how far rtings is pushing objective testing for consumer products.
Also shoutout to Anthony for loving the box jades. Easily my favorite clicky/tactile switch.
Thanks for watching and the kind words! At the end of the day, it's always about helping you as a consumer get the right and best info you need about a product!
Pale blues > Jades ;)
I would strongly suggest also testing off center! Some switches are incredibly smooth straight up and down, but won‘t be as smooth when pressed off center. I know this is more of a stability problem rather than factory smooth test, but this definitely means something.
yea off center test is important reminds me about a video regarding the worst switches ever. some of them had a tendency to jam wen pressed of-center. in-case anyone is wondering pretty much all the first places were extremely old
mitsumi miniature mechanical place 2
yeah I was thinking about it as I heard about the test setup. Most "scratchy" feeling keys feel that way when pressing with some side force
@@AtaGunZ yes, exactly.
Best testing team/channel/website in existence right now. Keep it up RTINGS team!!
Thank you so much for the kind words and for watching! 😄
You should do more tests but with off center keypresses. Most linears feel exactly the same when testing straight on, give or take the spring and leaf properties. Off center presses are where you'll actually see switch materials and designs actually being stressed.
Also if you want to make an ultimate test, you should also test the raw components and build a frankenswitch with objectively the best parts, and then use that as a reference.
what a great premise and i am very glad to see another big channel show there is a galaxy of switch types out there. I'm not too picky, I just like a distinct difference going from keyboard to keyboard; My work machine uses a Topre RGB with BKE domes, where as my game machine uses nice lite kailh box whites. The box jades annoying his coworker got a laugh from me; they are quite a bit louder.
Thanks for watching! 😄 There really are a ton of different switches out there, so we aimed to try and make it easier for people to almost know what to expect of them out of the box!
I really love that you put so much research in your reviews and document the results so well. Keep up the good work!
10 times more results than I have ever seen from LTT Labs. Good job
Facts
LTT will always be an entertainment company, not a data analyst.
More testing is better, I want both Rtings and LTT Labs to be excellent
Data from LABs will always be tainted by Linus saying that couple of hundred dollars is not worth it for doing the testing properly, cant trust them anymore for numbers.
@dtemp132 I hope LTT won't compete with Rtings, I like them both. Maybe a cooperation would make happier everyone. LTT mentioned Rtings positiveley in multiple videos. 😊
no WAY! I have been hoping you guys would start keyboard switch reviews! this is amazing, thank you!!
Our pleasure! 😄
Definitely would want to see housing tightness/ stem wobble in the future. Also potentially more of a sound analysis with various plate materials. Maybe frequency response?
Yes. Objective data for the win. Great job detailing the results on the website
Thank you so much! 😄
What an amazing video yet again from Rtings! Thanks! I'm actually thinking of buying a new keyboard, so this info comes handy, even though I'm not some kind of a keyboard wizard. One suggestion: Does the feel (or scratchiness in this case) of these switches change after longer period of use? If the plastics are rubbing on each other, I would assume, that would change the feel of the switch after loooong period of time, so something to think about setting up for fun to see in the future!
Glad to hear you enjoyed the video! 😄The feel will change the more you use them and break them in, though it can take a long time to get to that point as you mentioned!
didnt no rtings did key switch testing
superb thank you for the results and testing!
As a fellow Box Jade user, I appreciate Anthony. If he wants to be even more annoying, there exist the most amazing (and cursed) clicky switches in existence. The "Zeal Clickiez". They're at least twice as loud as the Jades, with a deeper more satisfying sound. If you want the best possible sound, remove any keyboard foam, and buy a larger, preferably metal, case to allow the sound to reverberate. The only disadvantage is that the "light" version requires as much force as the average "heavy" switch category.
I'm glad someone is working on improving testing poorly understood components. You're doing great work!
Thank you! 😄 We'll let Anthony know about those switches and also apologize immediately to the rest of our coworkers 😂
Where can one find these, I've been looking forward to them for years?
The peak force of Clickiez is relatively high, but the post-travel is low and flat. So to me at least, it still feels like a medium-weighted switch.
lol working at rtings sound like a very interesting job
It is! Just keep your eyes peeled for what's going to be coming on this channel very soon 👀
Good to see you Abby 😊 great presentation.
Thank you for labs testing switches. I would suggest that you also document the known material and manufacturer of the switches alongside the force graphs and scratchiness measurements.
Love to see a spectacular methodology explained, even for something with such a high personal preference
I'm rocking some ink black v2 silent switches, lubed and filmed in a keychron V2, love how it sounds/feels.
TIL Galileo was from Rtings! You learn new things every day.
more force curves available for obscure switches can only be a good thing
Loving the work and overview! Looks like you guys have a real knack for engineering projects and objective QA. In the consumer review space, this is truly industry-leading.
Appreciate the kind words! We do our best 💪
Good job, factory lube makes such a a difference, great to remove subjective testing since so many people are wrong, especially without having a wealth of experience to compare with. Even with objective testing though, it's ultimately still the users subjective preference and experience that matters most when selecting a switch. more data is more better though! I wonder how my smoothness ratings compare with your objective measurements
Been lurking around for a long time now. But here I can't contain myself and leave a comment.
I'm constantly amazed at how accurately you perform testing - considering factors that really make a difference. Huge thank you for that! ❤
Regarding switches, I'd advise everyone to try pre-lubed BSUN and HMX switches - they are far superior to the 'popular' brands like Cherry, Akko, etc.
My favorites are BSUN Roselle, Bunny, Akashi, HMX Cloud, and if you're on a budget: the MZ Z1 switches. All these have been easily accessible recently - lucky us! :)
I've had an acryl base like that and the switches weren't very secure in it. some were moving inside of the holes, some poped out by a millimetre. Though it will take more time, i recommend using solder to fix the switches in please and eliminate variables.
This is amazing! The market is niche so I'm so glad to see some objective measurements invested into it!
Glad you enjoyed it!
RT doing God's work. The audio test alone will save purchases.
Can you guys look into laptop keyboards? Some laptops have issues where if you don't press down on the keys correctly, such as on a corner or edge, you can feel the "snap" of the key actuating but it won't actually yield a keystroke. Notable examples would be the ASUS gaming notebooks. I have some video documenting this if you need an example of what I mean, but it should be easy to check for - just slowly apply pressure to the key at various spots and see if you can get the key past that actuation point without a keystroke happening.
In my experience, the keyboards where this is very easy to do I experience higher error rate in my typing, more people report keycaps falling off (Cause of bad stabilization maybe?), and many of them tend to be gaming machines. Some of them even aren't (such as some of the Dell Latitudes I tested) but I don't have a good way to quantify this per machine. Seems like you guys have the equipment to better do this than I ever could/was able to. Thanks!
The spacebar on my Surface Laptop has this and it drives me absolutly bonkerbecauseIonlyrealize too late and have to backspace a bunch....
another very good job
Thank you! Glad you enjoyed the video 😄
I think adding the audio component was done a little early/hastily for this.
A wider selection of switches should've been used to detect at what point the scratchiness factor enters into the noise level/floor of what is distinguishable for human perception, while having the test run in a quiet box that participants would reach into, so that they couldn't hear the switches but had to focus solely on the feel of them. This would additionally require a quiet room for the participants to control for exterior noise and vibrations impacting the testing.
Then for the sound, participants shouldn't touch the switches at all but rather have a machine actuate them for consistent reproducible responses, and they should be listening at a set distance.
I'm sure you have a weighting between the scratchy factor and audio one for the factory metric, and I think until you individually measure the perception graphs (think SPL A curve) of both, your compound score won't be accurate. It's not enough just to tweak it until it matches what the participants scored in this one test, particularly when noise floor thresholds are hit/involved. (when I say noise, I don't mean sound. I mean the point at which you can't discern from no stimulation/difference at all: the placebo point)
I wanted to join rtings a few years back, I'm in the area, but covid really messed things up for me...
Ooh keyboard switches are coming?! Love it! I really need more data so I can determine which ones I need to try next :D I'm currently using pre-lubed Gateron Silent Browns, as I fell in love with these while trying out more than a hundred keyboards in South Korea's main keyboard store. Data will definitely help me put my experience with switches into something more tangible. Cheers!
You can already see some of the data we have on the 101 switches we tested! www.rtings.com/keyboard-switch
Reason many went for the hearing test is because a switch may feel smooth but due to spring/contact rub sound scratchy. Early kalih switches had a lot of those issues, needless to say switches have come a long way since then.
Everyday i thank god for RTINGS and their technical reviews. Otherwise id have to rely on gamer69 who reviews based on vibes (yuck).
edit: on a serious note, thank you rtings, you helped me pick the right monitor for me and your keyboard reviews are goated with the technical testing.
Very glad we were able to help you choose the right product you needed! 😄
Oh wow, did not expect to see switches review, always seemed to subjective of a thing. That's awesome that you can find a way to help people choose the best switch for them. Going on feel ranking from an individual is a decent strategy, but its really nice to see the actual numbers too.
An interesting note for testing: I would record how a human would press different switches and record that curve. And I think this pressing curve is different with different keys because of the different resistance, but maybe can be averaged for a more human aproach. I think in real life the keys are not pressed linear like the test machine. It would be an interesting experiment. 🙂 I really appreciate the value you make with these videos. I would really enjoy working on projects you do 😊
RTINGS and Hardware Unboxed are the only sources I fully trust on this stuff. Trying to measure things with as much objectivity and hard data as possible really helps and the effort that goes into this is seriously appreciated. Hope I can pitch in more support in the future.
When I was working on developing cycling shifter buttons for feel you needed a high actuation force.... but people connected loudness to click feel. Noise blocking headphones or ear muffs threw peoples rankings way off with the switches.
In addition to off-center, I'd also strongly recommend using multiple pressing speeds to tease-out things like slip-stick.
You guys are awesome
Shout out to my boy Galileo. We lost a real one in 1642
Lmfao, whoever wrote this script deserves an award. Great video as usual and Abby sure has the right personality to present!
Vouching for the off-center test here. Especially hitting LCTRL with a force vector that's not perpendicular to the key. I switched keyboards because of a difference in that, even though I couldn't tell the difference in normal up-down presses.
When people type, they don’t only apply axial loads to the switch (as your tester does). Humans apply lateral loads as well, and this can induce additional binding / scratchiness that manifests independently of the pure axial measurement.
There are a number of different ways this could be incorporated into your testing, but going beyond pure “straight down” smoothness would be highly illuminating.
Mechanical keyboard makers investing millions of dollars to replicate the feeling of a $10 membrane keyboard
When I try a new keyboard, whether it's laptop or mechanical, I always press the keys on their side/corner to see if they are scratchy. Because when I type, I don't always press at the exact center.
I hope you do a version that tests & compares loudness.
Why don't you test these mini switches against a full size cherry DX-44 mounted in a IL\Happ button for a unbiased neutral control. It's not a Keyboard button but if any mini button can even get close to a full size microswitch mounted to a 2in plunger with a large spring inside it, it means its a decent enough switch.
While we catchup on the backlog of user questions from the holidays (our team was off), we're currently answering all questions via our website to ensure we don't miss any! www.rtings.com/forums
Switches are subject to switch batch variance. Switches produced when the molds are new tend to be smoother and more consistent.
It looks like the actuation was removed from the force graph, correct? But that's the majority of the scratchyness I perceive and care about.
I played around a bit trying different keyboards when I "discovered" mechanical switches. Came to the conclusion I have no preference. Guess my fingers are not refined enough to care. My turtle beach membrane keyboard I got from a bargain bin feels good enough to me even compared to the much more expensive cherry switch keyboard.
But I found this video of people putting so much effort into putting a objective numerical data on the scratchiness of keyboard switches amusing.
Maybe I missed it, but did you get data from the load cell with no switch underneath it? Is it perfectly smooth every time?
Without any resistance the load cell records 0 with minimal noise. If would spike hard once it would touch the PCB and the machine would reverse.
Cool content! I hope to see more of it.
We have lots more on the way on this channel, stay tuned! 👀
You should try hmx switches. I think the hyacinth v2s are so smooth lube isn't necessary.
good video! great humour and info! but why do you keep running away in the intro?
Thank you! We're running from our responsibilities 🏃♀️
Gateron ink kangaroos spotted. They are wobbly but damn do i love them
i started typing this before I have finished watching the video. I would want to know if the travel time between "home to actuation to bottom to reset to home" and their variant lengths of time between each switch could result in different noise levels or smoothness.
You have a slide that shows actuation to reset, but obviously this video and its contents are about smoothness. And the video doesn't cover what i am describing.
Our other video that we did might help answer some of what you're asking! ua-cam.com/video/uTz7RsPLkE8/v-deo.html
Personally I prefer the quietest switches with the least amount of travel. I stopped using my new Logitech gaming keyboard as I hated the long switch travel time as it was delaying my relativeness. Btw I love the idea of Quickie-switches such as on Wooting's keyboards, I hope all keyboards take on this tech for all its keys but some gaming platform's, I think it was Uplay have started banning people if they detect its use as they see it as cheating. But we have always had technological variances where one user can gain advantage over the other based on the products they are able to purchase. I think its wrong to ban people especially as its likely to be a technology all the major brands will include in the near future.
This is amazing 👏
I wonder how far the cheap outemu switches are from the cherry switches, currently typing on some outemu red switches and they arent too bad imo, but the WORST switches ive ever felt have to be the KRGD blue switches, truly awful feel and sound
I simply cannot get used to anything other than my old rubber dome keyboard that I have been using all my life.
Headphone guys do keyboards now?
Wuque Studios WS Quartz, they sound incredible and feel great.
These aren't apart of the 101 that we tested, but we'll have to believe you on this one! 😄 From watching other videos, they sound so nice!
Were these factory lubed switches? How sure are you that all these switches were "unlubed"? Factory lubed switches are way more inconsistent than if someone lubed them, and I'm surprised this wasn't highlighted in the video at all.
Additionally, I understand you're trying to remove any bit of variance with the decision to not hand-lube switches, but that makes this experiment a little less meaningful since a majority of users do not use these switches straight out of the box. If you ever dedicate the crazy amount of time to hand lube these switches (good luck, lol), using the popular lubes associated with each switch would make this way more impactful.
Hello Abby😊
Hi, she's Abby!
?
!
I simply choose to live in a reality where scratchiness isn't real and is just made up by youtubers and redditors.
I think you’re doing that force test too slowly, the result won’t reflect what a user would feel as they’ll be pressing the key much faster with their fingers.
"objective". imagine trusting someone who is putting switches (oil kings) that not only have polished molds/polished rails and also come factory lubed at around the same level as switches (mx blacks) which have years old, worn out molds, are so scratchy stock that they are basically 95% of the switches that people send in to get diamond polished and broken in by specific services just to be at an acceptable level of scratch. not even the best batch of MX black is anywhere near as smooth as the average oil king.
nice
¿
¡
I see Abby, i click
No boba u4t? This data is worthless.
Stop running from the camera. It looks like you are running from me the viewer, and it makes me uncomfortable!
🏃♀️🏃♀️
You are just shy to admit, that you would watch more Abby 😅