Wednesday, May 21, 2008

SteelSeries 7G Keyboard Review


Look and Feel
If you're looking for a keyboard with game-specific functions, you'll have to look elsewhere. The $150 7G keyboard from SteelSeries is really rather basic. There are no fancy LCD displays or custom key layouts, no differently shaped keys to place game functions at your fingertips, no macro recording or other fancy software tricks. It's just…a keyboard. Only this keyboard is focused on key action and construction quality.

The keyboard itself is a full-sized standard affair with your basic rows of letters and numbers and function keys, the "inverted T" arrows, and a number pad. There are no separate media keys or game function keys.

Keyboard layout is a bit of a personal preference issue. The 7G includes the large L-shaped Enter key many people like, and a single-width backspace key (we prefer the double-wide backspace key, because we make lots of mistakes). It's a standard straight layout, rather than the split "ergonomic" or hybrid curved layouts you often see today. Beyond that, it's nearly devoid of special features.

There are really only two things this keyboard does outside of the general "typing in characters" stuff. The back left side includes a two-port USB 1.1 hub, and a headphone and microphone jack. The large, cloth-wrapped cable terminates in four connections—PS/2 for the keyboard functions, USB for the hub, and headphone/microphone for the audio jacks. You can't just plug in the USB and expect the keyboard to communicate with your PC that way—this is a PS/2 keyboard, though a PS/2 to USB adaptor is included. This is deliberate: A robust PS/2 buffer system is used to ensure that you can press a bunch of keys at the same time without locking up the input on your PC. Mash your hands down on all the keys at once, and they will all be transmitted to your PC. This is important in games where you're rapidly pressing multiple keys, sometimes with Shift or Control held down.

The keyboard itself is rather small, with a large, flat, sturdy "overlay" of sorts to add a palm rest. It's flat and hard, which makes it durable and less comfortable than those keyboards with softer palm rests.

Where you would normally find the Start button on a typical modern keyboard (between the left Ctrl and Alt keys), you'll see the SteelSeries key. Pressing this button does not open the Start menu or perform any other function in Windows. Rather, you use it in combination with the F1–F6 keys for Media Key functions (mute, volume up/down, pause, and next/previous track).