As with every market that goes through a sustained period of significant growth, the market of mechanical keyboards is becoming heavily saturated. There already are dozens of companies offering literally hundreds of mechanical keyboards, covering nearly all shapes and sizes in the process. Designers try to innovate and differentiate, which lead to features such as RGB lighting and modular key switches, but this becomes exceedingly difficult as the number of companies and products continue to increase, especially since there's only a small number of mechanical key switch designs to build keyboards around.

Therefore, several companies are now trying to innovate on the design of the mechanical key switches themselves, and we are starting to see new switch designs coming into production in 2016. The first few new designs came from Chinese/Taiwanese manufacturers, but the high demand has meant that the older and larger players would not stay idle either.

One of the first and largest players in the mechanical keyboards market is Corsair. They slowly entered the market with just a single keyboard, but it was such a great success for the company that they soon founded Corsair Gaming, a sister company focused on marketing and selling gaming-related peripherals. Corsair’s great success is heavily attributed to their exclusive deals with Cherry, the most reputable manufacturer of mechanical key switches. For example, they had an exclusive for Cherry MX RGB switches for a year, which made the K70 RGB one of the most popular top-tier gaming keyboards last year.

Today we are having a look at the K70 RGB RAPIDFIRE, the keyboard born from another exclusive deal that Corsair has made with Cherry’s new mechanical key switch, the “RAPIDFIRE”. It is a switch designed specifically for gaming by combining light actuation force and higher actuation speed. On paper it does sound interesting, and today we'll put its design to the test to see if there's any actual improvement over Cherry’s “classic” designs.

Packaging and Bundle

We received an early production sample of the keyboard so Corsair did not have its exterior packaging ready yet. It will most certainly be dark with yellow accents, aesthetically focused on a picture of the keyboard itself, like every other keyboard packaging they produce since 2014. The cardboard packaging is very strong and offers more than sufficient protection to the keyboard during transport.

Inside the box, we found a couple of basic quick-start and warranty leaflets, a set of extra keycaps and a full size wrist rest. The wrist rest has a corona-treated surface that gives it a soft, comfortable rubber-like feeling. The extra ten keycaps have contoured, textured top surfaces, assisting tactile feedback when gaming. The first set is supposed to be for FPS gamers and the second for MOBA gamers. Both sets are contoured and textured. Two keycaps, the W and the D, exist in both sets but have different contours as a result. 

The Corsair K70 RGB RAPIDFIRE Mechanical Gaming Keyboard
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  • TrevorH - Friday, July 1, 2016 - link

    Nice keyboard, shame about the LED reliability. Am now on my 4th K70 under RMA...
  • DVDxR - Friday, July 1, 2016 - link

    RGB or the monochrome K70? The mono K70 definitely has issues with LED reliability that led Cherry to redesign them when they did the switches for the RGB series. They were having ESD issues do to the LED placement on the old switches.
  • Impulses - Friday, July 1, 2016 - link

    Huh, I didn't realize they released a "Lux" version of many of their boards (RGB & non) which updated the internals and added USB pass thru... There goes the last excuse I had for clinging to my original K90 (in silver, with the rubber dome F keys). That pass thru port helps keep the desk tidy...
  • SlyNine - Friday, July 1, 2016 - link

    Sad that there is still no 1080GTX review.
  • RaichuPls - Friday, July 1, 2016 - link

    I've already given up on asking about that, and the GTX1070 review, and the Galaxy S7, and the HTC 10.... You get my point
  • Lolimaster - Saturday, July 2, 2016 - link

    I can cry more, still waiting Sony Xperia Z4 Tablet review, sobsobsob equisdedede
  • mr_tawan - Saturday, July 2, 2016 - link

    What's about buying one and make your own review :)
  • Michael Bay - Saturday, July 2, 2016 - link

    What is this fixation with WASD on all "gamer" keyboards? It was never a standard to begin with, and most people moved to ESDF back in Quake days at the minimum.
  • Urzu1000 - Saturday, July 2, 2016 - link

    WASD remains the most common configuration of movement keys for modern games. There are literally tens of thousands of games that use WASD by default. I've never come across any game that defaults to ESDF. Arrow keys occasionally, but never ESDF.
  • DanNeely - Saturday, July 2, 2016 - link

    90% of games I've played in the last decade or so that show a UI default of WASD actually do WASD or arrow keys.

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