Featured

Ozone Strike Battle Mechanical Gaming Keyboard Review

Performance


One thing I love about mechanical keyboards is that no matter which brand I choose, from Corsair, Mionix, Cooler Master, Cherry and countless others, is that I can always expect 90% of the same experience from the switches that each of them use. Cherry MX switches are famous for their uniform performance and quality, regardless of which brands keyboards you use them in. What makes the biggest difference is that 10%, the little tweaks to the keyboard construction, layout and general features that sets it apart from the competition.

For Ozone, that difference is certainly found in the chassis of the keyboard, it’s one of the slimmest fully mechanical chassis I’ve ever seen, it’s also one of the lightest and without a doubt it’s the more compact, with virtually no trim around the edge of the keyboard. What this means, is that I get the regular key spacing of any other mechanical keyboard, but still have a TKL design that takes up very little space on my desk. This is great, as it leaves me with a huge amount of space to use my mouse, which is great for those times you’re using a low DPI and require the extra tracking space. The low profile design of the chassis also has another advantage, in that I can use it very comfortably without the use of a wrist rest!

The keys are MX Red, which means they’re light and fast, but I often find this means that the keys bottom out harder on the chassis, as I’m quite a heavy-handed typer. That’s not the case here, as the keys don’t bottom out on the keyboard chassis and this is one of the quieter mechanical keyboards I’ve used.

The macro functions are a welcome bonus, although they’re a little out-of-the-way to be practical for me. I’m used to using my left hand to trigger macros, while these ones are on the right side of the keyboard. They’re less practical for gaming, but I found them to be easily programmed to launch applications, tweak settings in Photoshop and other productivity apps. This is fine though, as I don’t use macros in games that often, but having the productivity boost while I’m working is no bad thing.

When it comes to gaming, the Strike really delivers the goods. Rapid key strokes are a breeze, the report rate can be fine tuned to suit your preference and the LED backlighting makes it a lot easier to see what you’re doing in a darker room, while remaining bright enough to look cool in a fully lit room.

This is a great gaming keyboard, it’s fast, nimble, easy to move around should you travel a lot to LAN gaming events and it looks and feels fantastic.

Page: 1 2 3

Peter Donnell

As a child still in my 30's (but not for long), I spend my day combining my love of music and movies with a life-long passion for gaming, from arcade classics and retro consoles to the latest high-end PC and console games. So it's no wonder I write about tech and test the latest hardware while I enjoy my hobbies!

Disqus Comments Loading...

Recent Posts

Varmilo VEA88 CMYK Gaming Keyboard, MX-Red, White-LED

TKL mechanical keyboard with 88 keys in a UK ISO layout V-silk PBT keycaps with…

15 mins ago

noblechairs ICON Gaming Chair – Java Edition

Following on from the success of their Black Edition series earlier this year, noblechairs now…

17 mins ago

MSI Pro B650M-A WIFI (Socket AM5) DDR5 Micro-ATX Motherboard

Storage PortsM.2 PCIe 4.0 x42SATA 6G (internal)4ColourPrimary ColourBlackWiFi & LANLAN ports1x 2.5 Gbit/sLightingLightingYesLighting ColourRGBForm FactorMotherboard…

18 mins ago

Gigabyte AORUS WATERFORCE 360 ARGB Liquid AIO Performance CPU Cooler

330 degrees manual rotatable design. Free to adjust your preferred orientation. Tube diameter 5.1 mmØ…

19 mins ago

Thermaltake S100 TG Tempered Glass Micro-ATX Case Black

The S100 Tempered Glass mid-tower chassis combines sophistication and elegance in a modern steel case…

55 mins ago

WD Black SN770M 22×30 2TB M.2 PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSD/Solid State Drive

Expand your handheld gaming device or M.2 2230 compatible laptop’s storage with the WD_BLACK SN770M…

57 mins ago