For the price, everything is good except with some keys (ctrl shift) which gives me a spring sound when pressed. A fn button to (de)activate the F* row without pressing each time a F* is needed (like a laptop)
This is my first mechanical keyboard, and I figured a cheap one would help me figure out what kinds of things I like/dislike in them. For the low price point, this keyboard delivers what it wanted to do. Looks exactly like the pictures, rgb lighting is neat, and it has a very low desk footprint. My only complaint is the switching between arrow keys and the other keys in the bottom left corner, as I'm quickly finding out just how much I use both sets of keys. This may be a consequence of 60% keyboards as a whole, and not just this specific product.
Update on April 11. After less than a year of use, the spacebar's switch is dead. I have tried everything short of replacing the switch. I'm going too drop this from 4 to three stars. These switches should last at least a year.
Original review:
I got this to use on a coffee table where there isn't much desktop real estate. Compared to the tenkeyless it replaced, it is less functional, less pretty, less nice sounding, but importantly....less BIG and less expensive.
Worth mentioning: I knew going in that at this price point, the caps wouldn't be great. They aren't. The legends are ugly as sin (especially the number row), but I need them for now until I memorize the Fn layer layout.
The one significant drawback to the Fn layer scheme is that, by default, when you enable arrow keys, you lose access to the question mark key. It may have been nicer to swap the physical location of Fn and Rt-Alt, then place the arrows on Shift, menu, Ctrl, Alt...
Anyhow, for the price, it is a small mech and meets my expectations.