First up is the Cheetah gaming keyboard, taking a look at the front of the box we can see a decent enough design on the box, although I do think the “for extreme gamers” badge in the bottom left may be somewhat ambitious, so we’ll pretend that’s not there. On the right hand side we can see a run down of its major features, such as the Anti-Ghosting capability for up to 11 keys, Windows key lock, which prevents you from hitting the Windows key during gaming, LED indicators for the major function keys, not really a major feature though since this is common on nearly all keyboards and built to last for up to 20 million keystrokes, which isn’t a feature I’m capable of putting to the test unfortunately.
Out of the box we can see that the keyboard it’s self actually doesn’t look that bad, everything is where you would expect it to be, with the main body finished in a high gloss black and the keys in a matt black, it’s all fairly standard if I’m honest, but you can see in the top right we have the addition of multimedia volume up and down keys as well as the Windows key lock button.
Flip the keyboard over and we can see it’s fairly featureless on the underside, but does feature two flip out feet at the back to adjust the angle of the keyboard.
The main thing that stands out on the keyboard is the Cheetah logo in the centre, nothing major but a nice little touch non the less.
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