![]() ![]() At first glance it almost looks like a 75% keyboard but because it features arrow keys on the left, you get a little bit more room to play. I’d honestly recommend the wired over the wireless if you plan on keeping this in one place but I definitely appreciated the wireless option. Steelseries also makes a wired version of this keyboard for $189, which is less than $249 for the wireless model. ![]() ![]() Bluetooth and wireless work very well and as long as you don’t mind occassionally charging your keyboard you can get a few weeks out of one charge. It supports Steelseries own 2.4GHz connection using a dongle or Bluetooth 5.0 if you switch it on the back. I’m not a huge fan of these colorful keyboards but I won’t begrudge you your fun. The whole package is nicely built and the cute LEDs under each key make it visually exciting an very fun. The keyboard requires the SteelSeries Engine app to fine tune things but once you’re up and running you can control the keyboard from your PC and even adjust single keys using the OLED screen at the top corner of the screen.Īs a fan of clicky keyboards the Apex Pro TKL Wireless scratches a lot of itches. The keyboard also supports macros, allowing you to even set two actions per key, meaning you can set one button to walk and run at the same time, depending on how hard you press. The keys are also completely adjustable to reduce actuation time and you can actually raise or lower the actuation level on the fly. The keyboard uses OmniPoint 2.0 adjustable switches that use magnetic actuators to speed things up 11x. While I’m no gamer, I need a clicky, responsive keyboard that isn’t too small and the Apex Pro TKL Wireless is just that: it’s a tenkey-less gaming keyboard with macro support as well as wireless, USB, and Bluetooth connectivity. By John Biggs gaming, keyboard, steelseries ![]()
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