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AcasăInteligența artificială și învățarea automatăThis Retro Gaming Keyboard Hits All the Right Nostalgia Vibes and It's...

Această tastatură retro pentru gaming lovește toate vibrațiile nostalgice potrivite și este o tastatură grozavă

As a child of the ’90s few things get my nerd brain tingling like good ol’ Super Mario. Even hearing my best friend’s Mario-themed phone notifications take me back to a simpler time. So it’s no surprise that I completely nerded out when I saw 8BitDo’s Retro Mechanical Keyboard decked out in Mario colors. A solid mechanical keyboard with a heavy dose of nostalgia? Count me in.

If the Mario theme isn’t up your alley, the Retro is available in a few different versions, each pulling something from the gaming and computing archives. I love seeing something a bit (pun intended) different out of keyboard designs rather than just fancy lighting. Best of all, the Retro has the hardware to back up its great looks. 

What I like about the 8BitDo Retro mechanical keyboard

8Bitdo Retro Mechanical Keyboard N Edition with buttons

CNET/Jason Cockerham

The fun theme is far from the only original thing about these Retro keyboards. 8BitDo makes three different accessories for the keyboards that will set your inner nerd-child’s heart racing. There are four Super Buttons — a set of two comes in the box — each meant to act as a single “A,” “B,” “X” or “Y” button from the consoles of yesteryear. They’re color matched to the theme as well being available in bright yellow, green or blue. If you’d rather not break out the Super Buttons, there are two large “A” and “B” buttons on the bottom of the keyboard you can use 

There are also a Super Joystick and Super ABXY accessories. The former matches the retro style of the keyboard, of course. The latter has four keyboard keys colored and labeled to match “ABXY” buttons from a controller. Not only are these fun to use, they can be customized with whatever macros you choose, aside from just gaming. The Super Buttons are $10 each and the Super Stick and ABXY are $15, though there are some packages that include one more of these accessories with the keyboard.

It types great too

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CNET/Jason Cockerham

If the design alone wasn’t enough to sell you, it also types great. The Kailh Box White V2 switches offer plenty of tactility and responsiveness. Best of all, the board is hot-swappable, so you can quickly change out the switches for others if you desire. The keycaps are Dye-Sub PBT which gives them a solid feel and means they should last quite a long time before showing any wear. Overall, I enjoyed typing on it.

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CNET/Jason Cockerham

Everything else you’d expect from a good mechanical keyboard is here too, like Bluetooth and 2.5GHz wireless connectivity, solid battery life and robust software support. There’s also an optional external numpad that matches the aesthetic of your keyboard for about $45. Or if you want to have it built in, 8BitDo has full 108-key versions of the N şi Fami Editions for $120.

What I don’t like about the 8BitDo Retro mechanical keyboard

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CNET/Jason Cockerham

There’s not much I don’t like about the 8BitDo Retro keyboard. The design is awesome, the build quality is superb and the functionality is useful and fun. If I had to be picky, I do wish the included cable had some sort of retro theming as well. The 2.4GHz dongle does, so it would make sense for the cable to as well.

The same goes for the cable attached to the Super Buttons. It would be cool if it somehow matched the aesthetic of the keyboard, especially as it might clutter up your desk if most of your other peripherals are wireless. I might end up switching out the Kalih switches, but that’s purely personal preference. That said, having at least a few different switch options at checkout would be nice.

Should I buy the 8BitDo Retro mechanical keyboard?

Yes. The build quality is solid, the design is one of the best retro-themed ones I’ve seen on a keyboard, and the added functionality adds a lot of fun. 

Most importantly, the price is great. This version retails for $100, but I’ve often seen it on sale for $90. There’s also the The Fami version, which has a maroon Famicom computer aesthetic, and a brown-on-brown “Commodore 64” C64 version. The most expensive version is the green officially-licensed Xbox one, but at $120 it’s not that much more than the others.    

Amazon

8BitDo’s Retro combines a fantastic keyboard with a healthy dose of nostalgia.

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