At the very least, they should be easy to wipe clean when that time does come. If it works as advertised, the coating should keep the G915 from developing the worn-in shiny look that even premium keyboards develop after six months of use. I’d have to use the keyboard for months to get a proper read on this. In other words, the keys resist the oil naturally in our hands. Speaking of which, Logitech says the keys themselves have an oleophobic coating. The brushed texture means that the faceplate itself resists things like fingerprints and grease extraordinarily well, and the board itself has very little flex. The plastic underside is almost completely hidden by the beveled aluminum faceplate that sits under the raised, low-profile keys.
This keyboard is skinny and sleek, especially when compared with standard mechanical keyboards. The core of the Logitech G915 is its low-profile design.
At $249.99, you’ll want to do a bit of reading before picking the G915 up, but it might be one of my all-time favorite keyboards even after just a week of use. This sharp-looking piece of tech not only dumps everything including a tasteful kitchen sink into the mix, but it also brings a few standout features of its own. Where RGB LEDs were a highlight feature, they’re now just another bullet point on every other product page and review What’s left to make a keyboard memorable, novel, and maybe even worth replacing your current plank with? The might be that keyboard. Where mechanical keyboards were once a specialty, they’re now commonplace and every component vendor has a generic plank. It takes a lot for a keyboard to stand out these days.