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Keyboards Are Bad For Gaming

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Guess you like it

Keyboards Are Bad For Gaming

2024-07-16 03:16:14

Was a bit skeptical about a wireless kb for gaming, but so far this is probably one of the best keyboards I've ever owned and I've owned a lot. Might even try out a mouse from Asus now.

5
2024-06-14 03:49:27

Excellent battery life and great value for money. Great for gaming controllers, wireless keyboards, and such.

5
2024-04-09 03:15:41

Great headset from recently one of my favorite technology websites. Can find all of my gaming peripherals like Logitech keyboards and mice and everything I imagine. Headset is clear and very strong. Thinking of buying a professional microphone soon and maybe going above and beyond traditional gaming headsets

5
0000-00-00 00:00:00

I have always preferred mechanical keyboards, but did not require the multiple options and flashy LEDs of gaming keyboards. The Das Keyboard is another example (like be quiet cases) of superlative engineering. I spend hours composing complicated clinical reports. I love the feel of this this keyboard, which has increased the speed and accuracy of my typing three-fold. Recommended without reservation.

5
2024-09-28 03:18:23

[This review was collected as part of a promotion.] I use it for gaming school streaming and SPORTS it never disappoints I can have bad wifi connection and it would not shut off like other devices. I fell in love with the first one I got back in 2007 and I think it was time to upgrade this yeat

5
2024-09-02 03:57:21

I've switched to this after 1.5 years with AW3423DW, because Apex and Rocket League have been the majority of my gaming hours. The productivity loss wasn't that bad, and the stand shape leaves room for another monitor if needed. The visuals seem on par with the Dell, but the smoothness is a noticeable upgrade. It is especially clear in Rocket League with its rough transitions when playing the ball cam (like you normally should). 540 Hz monitors with strobing have even better motion clarity but I won't put up with ghosting nor the hit to image quality. The timing around Apex's vulnerability deprived me of the most relevant comparison, but even a similar frame rate looks better in The Division 2. Unlike Rocket League, this must come down to a massive improvement in total latency from superior processing time. AW34D3W was unusually bad for OLEDs, while this MSI tops the charts. The monitor supports 4K input for downsampling the image from modern consoles and media players. The flipside is that PC games detected the monitor as 4K when using exclusive fullscreen, but the borderless option is taking over anyway (DX12 doesn't even have exclusive fullscreen). The connectivity is an upgrade as well: 2 genuine HDMI 2.1 and a 90W PD USB-C are amazing to have. There are also the usual 2 USB-A ports and a backup DP 1.4, too. Software-wise, this is completely fine out of the box unlike certain Samsungs and Dells were. A DSC toggle and separate color profiles for SDR & HDR should come with a future firmware, and the only other quirk is monitor turning off rather than going back to standby after a pixel refresh on idle. For pure gaming performance, this is the best OLED at the joint lowest price for this panel. I haven't been able to identify a caveat here. It is a great time to be an OLED aficionado.

5
2024-08-15 04:31:47

I was lagging bad while gaming… decided to get upgrade my router from the one spectrum provide. I’m a whole happier now

5
2024-05-11 09:19:57

I used this case for a new gaming build. The case is solid metal and is heavy. Not in a bad way, just solid. It is logically built, and all of the parts come off easily as you would expect. The fans run quiet (which is nice) although I haven't yet slammed the PC in a way that would jump the heat and cause the fans to ramp. The case is huge, and there is a ton of open space after the build. I'm running a ROG 790 with a Noctua NH-D15 Chromax cooler and the case is still 50% open space. Bottom line for me is that I totally dig this case and would absolutely purchase it again.

5
2024-06-17 03:19:43

I wanted the high core count for gaming and streaming in a mainstream socket and had already a bad experience with a Ryzen 9 3900x that died from a month of usage so, to avoid that, I decided to switch to Intel. I also don't care about achieving the highest clock speed so the non overclockable version was fine for me. So far so good, hardware monitor reports idle at 4.6Ghz and turbo up to 4.9Ghz on 4 cores while running warzone at 144fps and streaming on obs at slow preset and resolution 1600x900. Sometimes I get 2 cores at 5Ghz. It gets up to 80C with a 240 radiator cooling it. But thats not as hot as my ryzen used to get. Overall is a good processor. At the time of purchase it was at the same price as a new Ryzen 9 3900x. Is it better than AMD counterpart? For productivity task, no. The lesser core count makes it worse performing (although not bad) at that. For gaming? yes. The higher clock speed will get you higher fps.

5
2024-04-17 06:43:45

I was using a Gaming Tower PC for my Photo Processing which worked well but when the hard drive went bad I needed to replace it. The Mac mini M2 was just the ticket and I paired it with the 27 Studio display. I believe this was the best choice I could have possibly made. The system is absolutely awesome for my needs.

5