Corsair Vengeance K90 Backlit Macro Gaming Keyboard Unboxing & First Look Linus Tech Tips

Linus Tech Tips ·Linus Tech Tips ·2012-05-07 · 2,511 words · ~12 min read
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0:07 Well, you guys asked for it and this is the big brother to the K60, the Corsair
0:13 Vengeance K90 keyboard. Now, I made a mistake. I would say a fairly fairly
0:19 large mistake when I was doing my unboxing of the K60. And I said at the
0:25 time, although I corrected it by the end of the video, I said at the time that I
0:30 thought the K60 had blue backlighting. I
0:34 was wrong because I thought both the K60
0:37 and the K90 had blue backlighting. And my only experience with these keyboards
0:42 at all up to that time had been with the
0:45 K90. So now when I talk about the wicked
0:49 awesome individually backlit keys, I
0:54 will be correct because the K90 is a
0:57 gorgeous looking keyboard in the dark
1:00 with its beautifully individually backlit keys. So something else to bear
1:06 in mind about the backlight is that it does shine through these laser etched
1:10 numbers which are not printed. That's
1:13 right, they are etched. So that means that no matter what, no matter how many
1:17 times you press on any key on this keyboard, it will always stay well
1:21 illuminated and distinctly numbered or
1:24 lettered according to how the manufacturer intended. Okay, so let's
1:29 get the keyboard out. We got a warranty guide here, which is going to tell us
1:33 some little something about our uh probably 2-year warranty, I believe. And
1:41 yeah. Okay. You know what? I'll I'll I think the packaging for Corsair usually
1:45 Yeah, there we go. It's a 2-year warranty. Okay, so 2-year warranty. We've got a quick start guide, which
1:49 probably pretty much Oh, that's great. Full color illustration of plug the
1:55 things into the thing. Also, download the software um for managing your macro
2:01 profiles and whatnots from Corsair.com/vvengeance
2:04 K90. All right, so that's all pretty self-explanatory. What else we got in
2:08 here? We have a wrist rest. Wrist rests
2:11 can make or break a keyboard. And uh one
2:15 of the ways they make a keyboard is by being shaped and well and supporting
2:19 your wrist in a in a fashion that is uh you know good. U and one of my favorite
2:25 wrist rests of all time is actually on the Steel Series 7G which is also a
2:29 mechanical keyboard like this one. More on mechanical in a bit. Um and the way
2:33 that they can usually break a keyboard is by breaking.
2:38 And that often comes down to the mechanism employed by the manufacturer
2:43 to attach the wrist rest to the keyboard, which is usually just, you
2:47 know, a couple of little metal tabs. Although these ones seem to be fairly
2:51 wellb built. I can put a lot of pressure on them. They're not going anywhere. So
2:54 Corsair has uh sort of seen that
2:57 probably in action. I mean, their guys are I've met a lot of the Corsair team
3:01 and they're total enthusiasts. So they've probably encountered uh wrist
3:05 rest breakage in the past. Actually, my own G15 has uh has a broken wrist rest,
3:11 which is uh one of the reasons that it's no longer in service. So, what they did
3:15 is they went, "Okay, let's one up the rest of the industry and let's put,
3:19 check this out, thumb screws, which you
3:23 can also screw in with a Phillips head screwdriver, which might actually be easier based on my experience with my
3:27 fingers here. Um, thumb screws in the sides to make sure Also, oh, look at
3:32 this. Look at this. So it keeps it from going too far here, okay, with the shape
3:38 of this lip. And then keeps it from coming up too far once again with this
3:44 rather than putting all the pressure on these little plastic clips which no
3:48 matter how well you build them are prone to breaking. So way to go Corsair for
3:54 seeing what everyone else is doing and seeing why it was wrong and fixing it
3:59 with a, you know, three cent piece of metal. Excellent. Love it. Okay. Well,
4:04 actually, you know what? Why don't we finish up on the bottom here before we go? See, look at that. I accidentally
4:09 like went too far and it's fine. Uh, we've got a couple of these little
4:12 height adjust tilt adjusty dudes. We've got one, two, three, four, five, six,
4:18 seven rubber non-slip grippy feet. Um,
4:22 some experts believe that it the use of any keyboard may cause serious injury,
4:26 so like be careful and stuff. All right, let's flip this back over. So, I think
4:30 we're done with the underside of the keyboard. Why don't we go ahead and I'll
4:34 show you guys the pass through here. So, this be okay here. So, it's labeled with
4:39 two arrows. That means pass through. That's the one that actually runs the keyboard. So, it's a pass through, which
4:44 means that this is a fully powered and fully speeded USB 2.0 port because
4:50 there's no actual uh hub splitting going on inside the keyboard. So you go ahead,
4:54 you plug your mouse in there or you plug your mouse directly into the back, you plug a USB key in there, it's all going
4:59 to work just fine. So yes, mechanical keyboards. This is a mechanical
5:03 keyboard. At least uh most of the keys commonly used for typing are mechanical.
5:08 So the only keys on this keyboard that are not mechanical are these ones right
5:13 here, the macro keys. Part of the reason that Corsair opted to go with a regular,
5:18 well, now these days it's a regular um dome switch key for these guys is
5:23 because they wanted them on a different uh plane than the main keyboard. So, see
5:29 how these are quite a bit lower down than the rest of the keyboard.
5:34 This is actually for a very interesting reason. Now, if you've ever owned a G15,
5:39 I have a G15 Gen1, which was kind of the first keyboard to really do the whole uh
5:44 matrix of of programmable keys over here, you've probably pressed this key
5:49 instead of your escape any number of times. So, you go for escape, you go,
5:52 "Oh, oh, why isn't escape working?" So, that was why they went and they put
5:57 these down lower so that you can easily tell when you're operating the keyboard
6:01 when you reach the edge of the real keyboard and the beginning of the macro
6:04 keys. So, that's very cool. You've got three profiles for these. So, you've got
6:08 18 keys times three profiles right there. And you can manage that using the
6:12 Corsair software. Um, you know, actually another thing we haven't quite finished
6:16 up with yet is the wrist rest. So, it uses like a rubberized dimpled feel.
6:21 Actually feels very nice. It's like more it's like a soft touch type material.
6:25 Um, yeah. Yeah, quite nice and should be
6:28 fairly durable just based on how deep the dimples are. So, it should maintain
6:32 that textured surface, which I think is great for gaming gear because if you're
6:35 going to sit there and use it for a long time, a lot of the time you can get sweat on it, which means that if it has
6:40 those recesses, then you'll still maintain that that slight grippyiness
6:44 even in the presence of palm moisture.
6:47 So, yeah, that's good. Uh, what else?
6:50 Oh, yeah. Yeah, yeah, mechanical. So, mechanical keys. Ah, everything but
6:54 these guys. The F keys all along the top
6:57 here. And then this block of keys right here. These are mechanical. These are
7:02 all mechanical.
7:06 Can you hear the difference?
7:09 Okay. So, the reason Corsair opted for partially mechanical is because all of
7:13 the typing, all of the actual typing surfaces are going to give you that that
7:18 typing feedback that a lot of people do desire. And then the other ones that are
7:24 very much less frequently used, things like, you know, escape and F9 and page
7:28 up and page down are not mechanical. The number pad is the arrow keys are. Uh
7:33 let's have a look at some of the other functionality here. So we've got our media keys. So there's your volume
7:38 scroll wheel. This is one of the better implemented volume scroll wheels I've seen in the past. Got that nice This is
7:42 not a sticker. This is an actual texture to the uh to the wheel. So it's very
7:47 nice. Mute button, stop, back, pause, forward. Uh there are your LED
7:52 indicators of your uh number lock, caps lock, and scroll lock. You got a Windows
7:56 disable key and backlight control. Yes, this one actually does have a backlight.
8:01 Uh mechanical keys. Let's see if I can take one of these off fairly easily.
8:06 Uh how about this one? No. Okay.
8:11 Apparently, there we go. Okay. So, these are Cherry MX red keys. Um the actual
8:16 preferences uh vary dramatically from
8:19 person to person what kind of keys they prefer. Um
8:25 so really the solution is probably to try them. Uh, very shortly we're
8:28 actually going to have Corsair keyboards in pretty much every NCX store for you
8:32 guys to just sit in front of them and play around with them a little bit
8:36 because all mechanical keys, whether they're browns, blacks, blues, reds, I
8:40 think there's even a clear one, but those are a lot less common, do have a
8:44 slightly different feel, a slightly different sound. Um, Corsair determined
8:47 that for their purposes, the reds were the most desirable for as a balance
8:52 between gaming and typing. Another thing that you're going to see here next to
8:56 the uh red mechanical switch right there is actually one of the things that's I
9:00 do like about them though is they're fairly quiet um compared to some of the
9:04 other mechanical keys uh is that is your blue light. And so every single key has
9:10 one of those lights and it not only illuminates the key but also kind of the
9:13 area around it on the aluminum uh
9:16 backboard that is part of this keyboard. So, one of the things you might notice
9:20 about it, if you see here, is there's actually quite a bit of space under the
9:25 keys, uh, between the actual the the
9:28 rigid back plane and the keys themselves. This makes it a little bit
9:31 easier to clean and it also gives it kind of a unique look. I've never seen a
9:35 keyboard where they've done this before because every keyboard does have a back
9:39 plane like this. Sorry, I'm still a little sick. um that
9:44 the keys are attached to, but most of them cover it up with something which
9:47 often leads to the accumulation of dust and dirt and doesn't really serve any
9:51 other real purpose. A couple things I haven't talked about yet, although I did
9:55 talk about them in my K60 overview, are the uh full matrix uh full key matrix
10:01 anti- ghosting, which just basically means no matter how fast you type, no
10:04 matter what combinations of letters you press, you're not going to accidentally
10:07 register any additional uh additional letters or anything like that. This is
10:12 more of a software feature. It's built into the software, the keyboard to make
10:16 sure that everything is registered correctly over USB because USB does on
10:21 some keyboards that don't implement these features, USB does have some
10:25 limitations. Another one of the limitations of USB is that typically you
10:29 can only press, I believe it's six keys at a time. So 1 2 3 4 5 six and the last
10:35 one will not be registered at all. Um what Corsera has done is they've given
10:40 you up to 20 keys. So that's a 20 key rollover where you can actually yes
10:45 press 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 like you can press 20
10:52 keys before it will actually stop registering keystrokes which is pretty
10:55 much uh the practical limit of actually I'd say that's above the practical limit
11:00 of how many keys most people can press at a given time. I just want to make
11:03 sure there's nothing I've missed here. You guys can actually I never even showed you guys the box really. So,
11:08 there's Corsair's look at it. Uh, fully customizable profiles, 36 kilobytes of
11:12 onboard memory. Sounds like a really old computer. Hey, I bet I bet if you showed
11:16 this to someone, you're like, "Yeah, it's got 36K of memory on a keyboard."
11:19 They'd be like, "Oh, that's crazy." Um,
11:23 sorry, I digress. Uh, yeah. Yeah. Last thing I want to do is I do want to plug
11:26 this in for you guys and I'm going to turn off the lights in here. So, I'm
11:30 just going to go ahead and run this around to the back of my test bench
11:34 here. And we're going to plug that into We're going to plug that into a USB 3
11:38 port just for giggles. So, you guys so I can say it's USB3 compatible. Woo. Okay.
11:43 And then, you know what? Here, I'll show you guys in the light first. There you go. Has just a beautiful, beautiful back
11:49 lit look because not only are the keys illuminated, but you also see a very
11:52 distinct glow behind the keys themselves. Remember guys, here uh let's
11:56 pan around and have a look at the lights we've got in here. So yeah, and the
12:01 other side. So this is in my uh my little Tech Tips filming room here. And
12:06 that is how much you can still see the blue. So I'm going to go ahead and I'm
12:10 going to turn these lights off. One, two, three. And you'll see how much
12:15 that's going to stand out in the dark. This is one of the strongest backlights that I've seen on a gaming keyboard yet.
12:21 And as I said before, one of the most striking looking because of the
12:25 individually backlit keys and the way that the um the backboard for the
12:30 keyboard itself is a little bit further away. So it gives it a bit more room for
12:33 the glow to spread out. Just looks outstanding in the dark. So I think that
12:39 pretty much covers it here. I'll turn one of these back back on just so you
12:42 can see me again. Uh thank you for checking out my unboxing and first look
12:46 at the Corsair Vengeance K90. Don't forget to subscribe to Lest Tech Tips
12:49 for more unboxings, reviews, and other