Reviews consistently highlight easy tri-device Bluetooth pairing plus wired USB-C use, making switching between devices one of the board's most dependable strengths.
Connectivity is a clear strength, with repeated support for USB-C, 2.4 GHz wireless, and Bluetooth, although Bluetooth polling and some wake or dongle details vary by review.
Connectivity was a consistent strength, with repeated support for wired USB-C, Bluetooth, and 2.4GHz wireless, plus several reviewers praising quick switching or tri-mode flexibility.
Connectivity is a clear strength in the wireless models, with repeated praise for Bluetooth, Lightspeed, multi-device support, and generally trouble-free pairing and switching.
Connectivity is broad on the wireless model, with repeated praise for wired, Bluetooth, and 2.4 GHz support, while the wired-only version obviously drops those wireless options.
The keyboard supports wired and wireless connections, and setup is often smooth, with Bluetooth and 2.4GHz options appearing prominently in the evidence.
The keyboard is consistently treated as a wired USB-C model with a detachable cable, which reviewers liked for travel, cleaning, and setup flexibility, despite no wireless mode.
Connectivity depends heavily on model: wired reviews note the lack of wireless as a drawback, while Alloy Rise 75 Wireless reviews praise tri-mode support across USB-C, 2.4 GHz, and Bluetooth.
Connectivity centers on a wired USB-C plus USB-A arrangement with an included adapter. Reviews like the flexibility but note that the dual-connection setup can feel awkward.
Connectivity is functional but not especially flexible: the board is wired, supports passthrough, and benefits from that for low latency, but several reviews note the loss of wireless.