

Far more important is the build and here we can have few complaints. What's more, looks mean only so much on something that – if you're anything like us – gets covered in crumbs and tea stains within a week of going into service. Still, the keyboard is fairly easy to disassemble – with the orange, translucent black and grey plastic sections all coming apart - so a quick paint job is little more than an afternoon's work. Minimalism aside, we're still not entirely convinced by the look, with the simpler but far bolder, bright-red livery of the Diatec Filco Majestouch 2 being more to our liking. It's bold, brash and, well, about as much the antithesis of the minimalist lines of, say, an Apple keyboard as you could get.

Logitech G710+ | DesignThe Logitech G710+ wears its gaming heart on its sleeve when it comes to style with an angular two tone black-on-grey plastic design that's finished off with a bright splash of orange around the dedicated programmable keys ranged down the left side. Removable palm rest, Noise dampened keys, Media keys, Under-keyboard cable routing
LIGHTS ON THE LOGITECH G710 KEYBOARD WINDOWS
Extra features: Anti-ghosting keys, Game/desktop mode that turns of Windows key.Gaming keys: 6 dedicated programmable keys.Backlighting: Yes, with individual zone controls for cursors and WASD.Key switch: Mechanical – Cherry MX Brown.Although expensive, at £129, on the surface it certainly does plenty to justify the price. It features six dedicated programmable keys, adjustable backlighting, a volume wheel and game mode that at the tap of a button turns off the windows keys. But, despite their gaming leanings few have really gone all out with the bells and whistles.Įnter the Logitech G710+, one of the most fully featured mechanical gaming keyboards we've yet seen. It has taken long enough but finally we're seeing a healthy selection of gaming keyboards that use responsive and hard-wearing mechanical keys, rather than poorer quality rubber-membrane keys. Introduction and Design Manufacturer: Logitech
