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Quick Fire TK Stealth Player Keyboard with Side Keyboard Print

Quick Fire TK Stealth is a mechanical keyboard with the letters at the beginning and they are not printed on top. When viewed from above, all keys appear black, on the other hand from a sitting position, the print is seen slightly from the side.

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It’s not just a design trick, it has it of course, it also has a function, as the keys printed in this way have a longer lifespan are guaranteed as the fingers do not come into contact with the printed surface during use.

 

QuickFire TK Stealth is a compact, steel-reinforced mechanical player keyboard. Compact and lightweight, yet not without the full numerical unity, so though more space is left on the desktop, yet the keyboard has all the necessary functions has. The numeric part can be switched to player mode or at the touch of a button in numeric mode so there is no need to compromise.

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High quality Cherry MX switches matter a lot. Faster button presses, provides response time, greater precision and better feedback. N-key roll over means everything keystroke is recorded when pressed. A TK Stealth supports N-key roll overt USB mode. The media buttons are pressed with the FN button available, giving full control provides when playing movies and music. THE Quick Fire TK Stealth Player Keyboard Side Keyboard Printing Turns off the Windows button so you don't have to jump out of the game when pressed.

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The built-in steel tray provides maximum stability and durability. This keyboard is definitely a remains in place. The gold-plated and braided USB cable and cable routing have a strong connection between the keyboard and the PC.

Quick Fire TK Stealth will be available in November for approximately the recommended end user The gross price is around 32 900 HUF. Please contact your local Cooler Master representative or nearest retailer for more information.

About the Author

s3nki

Owner of the HOC.hu website. He is the author of hundreds of articles and thousands of news. In addition to various online interfaces, he has written for Chip Magazine and also for the PC Guru. For a time, he ran his own PC shop, working for years as a store manager, service manager, system administrator in addition to journalism.