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Here are my first impressions after owning it for an hour.
For somebody used to large vintage keyboards, this looks like a child's toy. I'm not missing the numeric keyboard, only the right enter, but that's something you can easily get used to.
It's quiet. It's heavy enough and will not move on your desk. It's really not what I'm used to, but I'll give it a few days and see if it will grow on me. It feels nice when bottoming the key because the bump feels like plastic hitting rubber and it makes a nice "clock" and a pleasant sound. There isn't a precise distinction or "feel" where the switch actuates.
There is some tactile feedback. It's apparently given by collapsing rubber dome (when pressing the key slowly) and the bump you feel when bottoming the key. If you try typing very slowly and gently pressing the keys, it feels more like an ordinary rubber dome. When you enter the superhero typist mode and turn the dial over 80 wpm, it starts feeling much better because the sound is OCD-ishly pleasing and the feedback is much better. Coming from a buckling springs keyboard, the keys feel much more mushy and rubbery.
Keys with stabilizers sound more mechanical and produce a nice sound when you abruptly lift your finger. All in all, it feels like a nice, high end keyboard. I will certainly try it for a while, and If I end up not liking it, it will have to go.
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Oh and, I got 101 WPM on a test with a model M and 105 with a RF, after only 1 hour of adjustment. Much easier to make mistakes with the Realforce. Maybe because the keys are way lighter?
Interesting.
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