242
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
this post was submitted on 22 Sep 2023
242 points (100.0% liked)
RetroGaming
19568 readers
521 users here now
Vintage gaming community.
Rules:
- Be kind.
- No spam or soliciting for money.
- No racism or other bigotry allowed.
- Obviously nothing illegal.
If you see these please report them.
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
I find the lack of a 10-key pad disturbing.
thats why these are called tenkeyless :)
I almost ordered, but this was a deal breaker.
Same, plus no UK ISO layout options.
That's the real kicker. Ain't gonna see me using the shitty ANSI enter, and the lack of a backwards slash between the shift and Z key
Yep, it's just a bit frustrating really. All they need to do is throw in some extra keycaps into the box.
I just cannot do ANSI. there is no reversing 30 years of muscle memory.
Edit: I mean, I can do ANSI. and other layouts - I have an original Famicom keyboard I love. But for daily use, especially work...no.
deal maker for me bro.
ain't nobody got time in life for tenkey
Full size or bust!
Different strokes for different folks, my dude doesn’t deserve downvotes for his opinion.
My desk space is minimal so I loved this TKL version.
Also just got mine and am loving those additional buttons for save state hotkeys.
TKL - I actually used one of these for years, well a bit smaller than the one pictured, felt really comfortable gaming because your mouse is closer to the centre. But yeah as so as I had to WFH it got replaced for an almost full size
You accidentally made me realize something. The keypad would probably be better on the left than right. There's nothing to the left of most people's keyboards, and presumably you have your keyboard positioned in the best place for your hands regardless of keyboard layout. Shift the keypad, and other buttons, to the left instead of right would make more room for the mouse.
Edit: This is apparently already a thing, labeled as "left handed" for some reason. I'm not sure what being left/right handed has to do with it though because we all type with both hands already.
The point is that about 90+% of people can't use the numpad with their left hand.
And if you really, really want this feature, look for keyboards with detachable or separate numpads. Ages ago, I've seen such a thing where you had four modules that you could arrange in any order: Keypad, cursorpad, numpad, trackball. Today, you can easily get separate USB numpads.
i'm firmly of the belief that it's designed to be on the left
if you use a calculator with your left hand, A) your thumb (strongest digit) rests on
=
(most used button), and B) you can write with your right handthen some wacko put it on the right of the keyboard, so enter is on your little finger and the mouse is miles away[^1] and now we have to live with the consequences
[^1]: yes i realise mouses weren't around when this layout was designed