Steelseries Apex [RAW] Gaming Keyboard Unboxing

Linus Tech Tips ·Linus Tech Tips ·2013-05-07 · 1,932 words · ~9 min read
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0:00 This video is brought to you by our trusted graphics partner, NVIDIA.
0:05 Welcome to my unboxing and first look at the Steeler Apex RAW gaming keyboard.
0:09 This is also the first unboxing that we're doing in our all-new Steeler
0:14 themed gaming den set that we're going to be using for Steeler unboxings as
0:19 well as Steeler product videos showing you everything that there is to know
0:23 about their products which are somehow different from unboxings
0:28 in a certain way that is different. All right, so let's start with what they have to say for themselves about this.
0:32 designed for quick reflexes. This is a lowprofile keyboard, meaning that the
0:36 keys don't need to be pressed down as far in order to actuate them. It does
0:40 use membrane key switches rather than mechanical key switches, but given the
0:43 price, this should pretty much be expected. It has raised macro keys, and
0:47 we're going to show you how this is used for fast key combinations, as well as a
0:51 brilliant white backlight with eight different levels of brightness. Other
0:54 than that, I pretty much know everything else there is to know about this
0:58 keyboard, having already looked at all this stuff. So, let's go ahead and get
1:01 it open. So, Steel Series has a plain black box with a black mat inside. And
1:05 then once you open it up, you find pretty much the keyboard itself in a
1:10 plastic sleeve, which I'm having a great amount of difficulty removing.
1:15 There we go. That was my big effort. That's like uh you know, some kind of
1:21 combo that I unlocked. It's like the
1:25 plastic removal and put the product down combo. There we go. Okay. We've also got
1:29 a quick start guide, which should be pretty much plug the thing into the thing. Although, they might give you a
1:33 few little instructions about how to use the software that's included cuz there's
1:36 some neat functionality in there. And last but not least, you've got a couple
1:39 of rubber feet that can be used to adjust the angle of the keyboard. So,
1:43 those just come in a little ziploc bag here. So, we're going to go ahead and
1:47 put that behind it and show you guys first the bottom of the keyboard.
1:52 And there was a cat incident. So, yes.
1:56 All right. So, on the bottom, you've got these two uh rubber feet that do not
2:00 move. And then you've got these two here, which can be removed just by popping them off. And then you can plug
2:05 a new one into it to give the keyboard more of an angle compared to if you
2:09 don't plug it in. So, there you go. You can see that raises it about a centimeter or so, maybe a little bit
2:14 more than a centimeter. And that's pretty much it for the bottom of the
2:17 keyboard. Other than that, it's uh well, a keyboard. So, let's move on to the
2:21 top. Layout wise, I'm so happy to see
2:24 Steeler has not committed any cardinal sins, as I like to call them, in terms
2:29 of the layout. Long shift key, long enter, long backspace. And I love to see
2:35 that macro keys are also sort of uniquely positioned on this particular
2:39 keyboard in that they are here on the left where we've seen them many, many
2:43 times. And they are also da da da above
2:46 all of the F keys. This is for a number of reasons. So the ones here are because
2:50 when you're on the WD keys, which are, you know, the pretty much the most
2:54 common gaming keys, you can reach this, you can reach this, you can kind of
2:58 reach this. You definitely can't reach another row over. And we've seen
3:02 keyboards with as many as two or three banks of keys there. Past two, it gets a
3:06 little bit on the impractical side. These ones up here are meant for people
3:10 who often use their F keys for binding abilities or whatever else. So, what you
3:14 can do is you can either hit a macro key and you can actually see I'll give you
3:18 guys a better angle here. You can see that the macro key is raised
3:21 significantly above the F key. This allows you to feel where the macro key
3:25 is without actually actuating either of the buttons. Or you can actually program
3:30 the keys to do a particular thing and then a particular thing. So, you can
3:34 actually hit a couple of them, one, two,
3:37 or even three buttons as a as a combination move. So, this could be
3:41 like, you know, fire one bank of missiles, fire two, fire all of them
3:45 because we're stuff's getting real, so go for it. Uh, so that's really neat.
3:49 So, there's five here, 12 here for a total of 17 macro buttons, and you can
3:53 use the L1 or the L2 buttons to switch the functionality. So, you can have an
3:57 unlimited number of profiles within the Steel Series Engine software, and then
4:01 you can have two layers of macro functionality per profile. Another
4:04 really cool thing, I mean this is one of the things they actually don't talk about that much in the marketing, but I
4:09 think is really cool is you can completely reprogram any key on the
4:12 keyboard to do pretty much whatever you want. You don't have to leave it the way
4:16 it is stock. So you can see Steel Series has relocated the Windows key from the
4:20 right to the left and the Steel Series key from the left to the right. You can
4:24 see my older 7G here has a Steel Series
4:27 key on the left and a Windows key on the right. So, according to the feedback
4:31 they've gotten, people want the steel or they want the Windows key back on the
4:35 left. So, they've gone ahead and done that. Now, this is an ergonomic thing
4:38 that Slick Diesel and I all agreed on when we saw this keyboard in the Steel
4:42 Series suite, and that is this longer space bar. So, I'm going to try and give
4:48 you guys a good look at this. I have two different feet on it right now, so don't
4:51 worry. It doesn't normally do that, but there you go. Uh, so what this does is
4:55 when you're typing, a short space bar is fine. it doesn't make any difference
4:59 because you rest just the the side of your thumb on the key. However, when
5:02 you're gaming, you're much more likely to end up in a situation where you have
5:06 your thumb resting down like this because you're not sitting on the home
5:10 row. You're actually a little bit further up than that. So, what this does is it's it's just meant to be a more
5:15 natural way to press the space bar without actually interfering with normal
5:20 typing. So, I think that's a pretty cool little thing as well. And moving right
5:24 along. Oh, yeah. I should probably show you guys just the overall design of the keyboard. I mean, I talked about how
5:28 it's low profile, but it has sort of a cool lowp profofile shape to it as well.
5:33 So, I'll do my traditional iPhone size comparison, although with the HT1 HTC1
5:39 coming soon. I might be doing away with that pretty soon. So, at its thinnest point, it's actually a little thinner
5:44 than an iPhone 4. And then at the thickest point up on the top, it is
5:47 significantly thicker than an iPhone 4. So, it has kind of a a curvy sort of
5:52 angular angular shape to it overall. You can actually see, I'll show you guys
5:57 right here up close if you want to see how much the buttons actually need to be
6:03 depressed. That is not to say sad, but uh pressed down in order to actuate
6:07 them. One thing I missed about the layout is they've added little bumps on the W key. So, this allows you to more
6:13 easily find your way back to them. I personally don't find something like
6:16 that that helpful because my landmarks are usually more to do with the
6:19 positioning of my spacebar and my shift and then I can find my way back to WD.
6:24 But if you have trouble finding it in the dark, then that's something that you
6:27 can uh definitely benefit from. Now, I'm
6:30 going to go ahead and plug it in, and we'll be back in a moment. So, there are only a few things that are really left.
6:35 We've got it plugged in now. You can see the backlight, but we're going to turn the lights off to show it to you in more
6:39 detail. So, the Steel Series key is used to control backlight brightness, as well
6:42 as your media keys, volume up, volume down, all that good stuff. And they have
6:47 readded the diagonal keys over here. So, they had taken them away on some
6:51 keyboard and then a bunch of people were upset. So, they have now brought them back. If you wanted the diagonal keys
6:56 back, then now you have them. It does
7:00 support up to 20 simultaneous button presses, uh, which is sort of an anti-
7:05 ghosting type feature that prevents you from accidentally triggering random
7:10 extra events, which is what ghosting actually refers to. Most gaming
7:13 keyboards do have this feature, but 20 is pretty aggressive, especially for a
7:16 USB model. And one thing that's kind of cool about it as well is they have
7:21 reduced the width of the keyboard a little bit by narrowing the gaps that
7:24 you usually find between the three different groupings of keys on the
7:29 keyboard itself. So it makes it still have a very large layout. So you've
7:34 still got extra keys at the top and on the side, but without being sort of
7:38 extraordinarily wide like something like a G15 Gen 1, which is sort of like that
7:43 that first weird sort of lots of macros gaming keyboard. that had like that
7:47 screen on the top and all that. Uh the wrist rest is a little bit longer than
7:50 usual. So, when you're resting on the home row, you're going to find yourself
7:53 right around here. So, there you go. I
7:57 personally find that more comfortable. It's one of the things I like about the 7G and dislike about a lot of the other
8:01 keyboards that are out there is very, very short wrist rests. And I think that
8:04 pretty much wraps it up. So, I'm going to run around and turn off some lights and we'll show you guys the eight
8:09 different uh levels of backlighting that are available on it. There's still a
8:13 window open, so there's still some light in here, but we're going to go ahead and
8:17 step it down one by one.
8:25 Oh, it's still Nope, it's off now. There we go.
8:32 And I think that's pretty much it. Thank you for checking out my unboxing and first look at the Steel Series Apex RAW.
8:37 Don't forget to subscribe to Linus Tech Tips for unboxings, reviews, and other computer videos.