Январь 2010 Февраль 2010 Март 2010 Апрель 2010 Май 2010
Июнь 2010
Июль 2010 Август 2010
Сентябрь 2010
Октябрь 2010
Ноябрь 2010
Декабрь 2010
Январь 2011
Февраль 2011 Март 2011 Апрель 2011 Май 2011 Июнь 2011 Июль 2011 Август 2011
Сентябрь 2011
Октябрь 2011 Ноябрь 2011 Декабрь 2011 Январь 2012 Февраль 2012 Март 2012 Апрель 2012 Май 2012 Июнь 2012 Июль 2012 Август 2012 Сентябрь 2012 Октябрь 2012 Ноябрь 2012 Декабрь 2012 Январь 2013 Февраль 2013 Март 2013 Апрель 2013 Май 2013 Июнь 2013 Июль 2013 Август 2013 Сентябрь 2013 Октябрь 2013 Ноябрь 2013 Декабрь 2013 Январь 2014 Февраль 2014
Март 2014
Апрель 2014 Май 2014 Июнь 2014 Июль 2014 Август 2014 Сентябрь 2014 Октябрь 2014 Ноябрь 2014 Декабрь 2014 Январь 2015 Февраль 2015 Март 2015 Апрель 2015 Май 2015 Июнь 2015 Июль 2015 Август 2015 Сентябрь 2015 Октябрь 2015 Ноябрь 2015 Декабрь 2015 Январь 2016 Февраль 2016 Март 2016 Апрель 2016 Май 2016 Июнь 2016 Июль 2016 Август 2016 Сентябрь 2016 Октябрь 2016 Ноябрь 2016 Декабрь 2016 Январь 2017 Февраль 2017 Март 2017 Апрель 2017 Май 2017
Июнь 2017
Июль 2017
Август 2017 Сентябрь 2017 Октябрь 2017 Ноябрь 2017 Декабрь 2017 Январь 2018 Февраль 2018 Март 2018 Апрель 2018 Май 2018 Июнь 2018 Июль 2018 Август 2018 Сентябрь 2018 Октябрь 2018 Ноябрь 2018 Декабрь 2018 Январь 2019
Февраль 2019
Март 2019 Апрель 2019 Май 2019 Июнь 2019 Июль 2019 Август 2019 Сентябрь 2019 Октябрь 2019 Ноябрь 2019 Декабрь 2019 Январь 2020
Февраль 2020
Март 2020 Апрель 2020 Май 2020 Июнь 2020 Июль 2020 Август 2020 Сентябрь 2020 Октябрь 2020 Ноябрь 2020 Декабрь 2020 Январь 2021 Февраль 2021 Март 2021 Апрель 2021 Май 2021 Июнь 2021 Июль 2021 Август 2021 Сентябрь 2021 Октябрь 2021 Ноябрь 2021 Декабрь 2021 Январь 2022 Февраль 2022 Март 2022 Апрель 2022 Май 2022 Июнь 2022 Июль 2022 Август 2022 Сентябрь 2022 Октябрь 2022 Ноябрь 2022 Декабрь 2022 Январь 2023 Февраль 2023 Март 2023 Апрель 2023 Май 2023 Июнь 2023 Июль 2023 Август 2023 Сентябрь 2023 Октябрь 2023 Ноябрь 2023 Декабрь 2023 Январь 2024 Февраль 2024 Март 2024 Апрель 2024 Май 2024 Июнь 2024 Июль 2024 Август 2024 Сентябрь 2024
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
Game News |

Kinesis Form review

If you browse through the usual online retailers, you'll find no end of keyboards with built-in touchpads, so for Kinesis (makers of the superb Freestyle Edge RGB) to enter that particular market, you'd naturally expect them to have something special. And at $199, the Kinesis Form does need to be special.

At first glance, it certainly stands out from the usual crowd of all-in-one keyboards. The chassis comprises two pieces of milled aluminium and it uses low profile, low force Gateron mechanical switches. The keys are split into two groups, providing a degree of ergonomic comfort for your shoulders, and there's a so-called Windows Precision touchpad nestled between them. There's even switchable white LED backlighting and a dual-profile Bluetooth connection.

Let's break all of that down, starting with the body. Eschewing the norm of using ABS plastics for the body, Kinesis has gone with CNC-machined aluminium and it's extremely robust. That does make it a little on the heavier side of things but at just 2 lbs (just under 1 kg), you're not really going to notice. It certainly makes it easy to just jam the whole thing in a bag, if you need to work on the go.

Kinesis Form specs

(Image credit: Future)

Switch type: Gateron KS-33 Red
Keycaps: ABS
Lighting: White backlighting, dimmable
Onboard storage: None
Extra ports: None
Connection type: Bluetooth LE, wired USB
Cable: USB Type-C/USB Type-A, detachable
Weight: 0.91 kg / 2.0 lbs
Price: $199

The downside to this approach is that the flat, low-profile format means there's no scope for any tenting, something that's a must for my daily use keyboards. That's a real shame because tenting is typically a strength of Kinesis. Perhaps if the Form is a success, the next iteration could have it.

I'd also like to see some means to provide a modicum of tilting. The Form is about as low-profile as you're going to get with a mechanical keyboard so it's not like your wrists are going to be overly extended while sitting at a desk. But if you prefer working at a standing desk, then it's less than ideal.

It is, though, a delight to type on. The Gateron KS-33 Red switches only require 50 g of actuating force but they offer 3.2 mm of travel, so the feedback is really quite positive. The switches are very quiet, too, with just the merest of clicks.

I'm not a big fan of the keycaps but it's an entirely subjective thing. The ABS material is somewhat of a grease-magnet and the matt black colour really shows where one's sticky fingers have been. Although Kinesis doesn't plan to offer any upgrades for the caps, plenty of keycap sets for traditional mechanical keyboards will fit and work with the low-profile switches.

The star of the show is, of course, the touchpad. At 2.5 x 4.5 inches (63.5 x 114.3 mm), it's a fair size but I feel that it would be better if it was a tad wider, even by just 10 mm or so. The portrait orientation makes it a breeze to scroll through webpages and documents, though the relatively narrow width means doing any broad mouse sweeps across the desktop becomes a little tricky at times.

Image 1 of 3

(Image credit: Future)
Image 2 of 3

(Image credit: Future)
Image 3 of 3

(Image credit: Future)

With a Windows 10/11 PC, one gets the full gamut of finger control and gestures, and hooking it up to my Asus ROG Ally showcased a perfect use for the Form—using a handheld PC for something more than just gaming. The vertical nature of the touchpad does, however, restrict how useful it is in games—it wasn't too bad in Baldur's Gate 3, for example, but playing any first or third-person shooter wasn't nice at all.

Part of the reason for that is there is no button mechanism underneath the pad. Mouse 'clicks' are done purely through touch (one finger for left mouse button, two fingers for right) and there's no haptic feedback to back up the registering of pressing the pad. Outside of gaming, it's not really an issue and I suspect the low profile of the chassis put constraints on what kind of touchpad Kinesis could use.

The same is true of the portrait layout—the touchpad could have been placed at either end of the keyboard but then the design would be far less compact (it's 16 inches / 406 mm wide) and would waste all that space between the keys.

(Image credit: Future)

When it comes to connecting the Form to a device (be it a computer, console, tablet, or even a TV), you've got one of two choices: low-energy Bluetooth for wireless freedom or the lengthy USB Type-C/Type-A cable included in the box. The former can be flipped between two profiles, using a small switch on the rear of the chassis, and it's very quick—hopping between the ROG Ally and another PC was a cinch.

Buy if...

✅ You want the quiet mechanical life: Those Gateron Red switches are a delight to use, replete with feedback and sport the merest of clicks.

You need to travel a lot: It's a hefty thing but that solid build quality means you can jam it in a bag and head out any time.

Don't buy if...

❌ You want full ergo: With no tenting or tilting options, the Form is only partially ergonomic.

You plan to game a lot with it: The touchpad is as good as they come but the portrait orientation makes it frustrating to use in games.

Not every device supports gesture recognition, though, so depending on what machine you connect the Form to, you'll have either full control via the touchpad or a fairly limited mouse action. That's something out of Kinesis' hands, so one can hardly criticise the Form for this.

I'm glad Kinesis kept the backlighting to a subtle white LED affair, rather than offering the usual RGB malarky to appease the gaming crowd. It's perhaps a little too subtle but it's enough to use the keyboard in a darkened room. The lights do eat into the battery life (Kinesis claims two to three months without the lights, one to two weeks with it on) but stab the right keys a few times, and you can dim them right down, as well as completely disable them.

So, what to make of the Kinesis Form? I've been using it daily for a while now, as a 'normal' keyboard and for some different scenarios, such as streaming my PC to a bedroom TV and controlling it while lying back. If it had tenting, I'd be using it non-stop, it's that nice to type on but the flat format doesn't agree with my ancient and somewhat ruined wrists.

(Image credit: Future)

It's obviously a niche-use keyboard and I don't mean that in any kind of negative way, but it does go some way to explaining the rather high price. At $199, the Form is touching on boutique keyboard territory and since all such items tend to be low-volume sellers, Kinesis can't rely on mass production techniques to bring the cost down.

It could have used a fully plastic chassis but then it would have lost a lot of its sturdiness, and been no different than the mountains of other all-in-one keyboards that one can buy these days. CNC-milled aluminium isn't cheap but its use in the Form lends it an air of quality.

The Kinesis Form is one of those keyboards that if you think is right for you, then you'll probably love it. For me, I think I'll wait for the Form 2 (Kinesis tells me it's already thinking ahead for the next one) and if that has tenting, or the option to buy a tented chassis, and it has a touchpad with haptic feedback, then I'll be first in line to try it.



Читайте также

Stickman World War 1.28

Разработчики A Quiet Place: The Road Ahead рассказали в новом видео о системе пряток

Enotria: The Last Song review




Game24.pro — паблик игровых новостей в календарном формате на основе технологичной новостной информационно-поисковой системы с элементами искусственного интеллекта, гео-отбора и возможностью мгновенной публикации авторского контента в режиме Free Public. Game24.pro — ваши Game News сегодня и сейчас в Вашем городе.

Опубликовать свою новость, реплику, комментарий, анонс и т.д. можно мгновенно — здесь.


Персональные новости

Радио – всегда локальное медиа

8 и 9 октября в Петербурге выступит Большой симфонический оркестр имени П.И. Чайковского

Говорит Земля! Comedy Radio зазвучит в сатирической комедии

Главным врагом хорошей улыбки россияне назвали цены у стоматологов