Reviews describe a pleasant overall sound with foam reducing ping and rattle, though one review still heard some plasticky rattle.
Reviews praise clean, satisfying acoustics, though some note a louder or less consistent spacebar and a brighter sound than enthusiast boards.
One review found the switch feel reasonably consistent across all keys.
Reviewers describe the switches as even, smooth, and consistent through the press, supporting dependable key travel.
Reviews explicitly note the lack of hall-effect-style analog control, so analog-style input features are absent.
Backlighting is visible and generally attractive, but brightness is not class-leading and some reviews found it dimmer than top rivals.
Reviews call the lighting bright and easily adjustable, with especially strong perceived brightness from the translucent keycaps.
Battery life is good rather than class-leading, with several tests clustering around the mid-30s to mid-40s hours with lighting and longer runtimes possible with power-saving settings.
Multiple reviews highlight standout endurance, with long real-world use and strong wireless runtime even if RGB and OLED reduce the headline figure.
Despite the plastic chassis, reviews consistently describe the board as solid, sturdily built, and better made than the price might suggest.
The board is generally sturdy and well assembled, but some reviewers still say it falls short of feeling fully premium for the price.
The included USB-C cable is described as rubberized, flexible, and perfectly serviceable for charging or wired use.
The included cable is consistently described as braided or sleeved, with solid accessory quality overall.
Compatibility evidence includes macOS support, pairing with compatible Logitech Lightspeed devices, multi-device use, and support for aftermarket low-profile keycaps.
Reviews mention Mac support and good aftermarket keycap compatibility from the south-facing PCB.
Tri-mode connectivity is a recurring strength, with 2.4GHz Lightspeed, Bluetooth, and wired USB-C all repeatedly confirmed.
Tri-mode wired, Bluetooth, and 2.4GHz connectivity is a clear strength across reviews.
Customization is a major strength, with G Hub and KEYCONTROL providing deep remapping, layering, and setup flexibility beyond basic lighting tweaks.
Reviews highlight easy customization via software, the OLED controls, and accessible internals or hot-swap design.
The TKL layout is explicitly praised for freeing up desk space.
The 75% footprint is repeatedly described as compact and desk-friendly without feeling cramped.
PBT caps and, in one review, a replaceable battery help the G515 make a stronger long-term durability case than many wireless boards.
PBT caps and long-wear construction are positives, but one reviewer reports easy cosmetic scratching on the finish.
Switch replacement is limited because the switches are explicitly described as not hot-swappable.
Hot-swap access and included tools make switch changes straightforward.
Low-profile height and adjustable tilt contribute to a comfortable, easy-to-reach typing posture.
Wrist rest support and angle options help comfort, though the rest is not always attached magnetically.
Game Mode and Logitech-specific extras are present, but some reviews still felt the board lacked more advanced gaming hardware features.
Speed Tap and OLED-based system or media utilities add gaming-oriented extras beyond basic typing.
Despite its slim plastic build, the frame is described as hard to bend with very little flex.
Despite mixed materials, reviews consistently describe the chassis as rigid, stable, and free of deck flex.
Gaming performance is generally strong and responsive, though the board is not positioned as the most hardcore esports feature set.
Gaming performance is strong for a traditional mechanical board, though the positioning is more mainstream or casual than cutting-edge esports.
Multiple reviews explicitly note that the switches are not hot-swappable.
Reviews consistently confirm hot-swappability and easy swap support.
Double-shot PBT keycaps are a repeated highlight for texture, grip, and durability, though some reviewers still criticized flatness, looseness, or smoothness.
Keycaps get consistent praise for material quality, finish, and non-slip or translucent design, though texture preferences vary.
Short-travel switches and responsive action make inputs feel quick across both work and gaming.
Keys are described as snappy, responsive, and quick in both typing and gameplay.
Key spacing is described as familiar and close to a standard ANSI layout, which eases adaptation.
One review notes more space between keys and suggests it may reduce accidental presses, though some adjustment may be needed.
Key stability is mostly positive, with some reviews praising minimal wobble and others noting more movement than ideal.
Stabilized keys and switch stems are described as stable with little wobble or rattle.
2.4GHz Lightspeed is repeatedly described as low-latency or lag-free, while Bluetooth carries the usual latency penalty.
Wireless latency is described as low or effectively unnoticeable in use.
The board sticks to a familiar TKL layout rather than offering alternate size variants, and reviewers found that layout practical and easy to learn.
Reviews mention the 75% layout plus Mac mode and ISO or ANSI context, but not a wide range of physical layouts in the box.
Shine-through legends are generally easy to read, but a few reviews noted uneven illumination or incomplete legend coverage on some keys.
Legends and secondary labels are generally easy to read and clearly printed.
Macro and layer functionality is deep, with several reviews highlighting the ability to assign up to 15 functions per key.
Macro assignment is supported and described as easy through software or onboard functions.
Materials quality lands above expectations for the price, with sturdy plastics and a generally premium-feeling finish.
Materials are decent and functional, but repeated plastic-base comments keep them from feeling truly top-tier for the money.
Media functions exist, but mostly as secondary Fn commands rather than dedicated hardware controls.
The OLED and knob controls for media and track handling are a recurring convenience feature.
The board is repeatedly described as quiet or audibly muted for a mechanical keyboard.
Noise is generally controlled and office-friendly, but several reviews call out a louder or thunkier spacebar and larger keys.
Onboard or built-in memory is confirmed for storing settings, profiles, or lighting when moving between systems.
One review explicitly notes onboard memory for saving settings without leaving software open.
One review explicitly notes the absence of a USB passthrough port.
Per-key RGB control is directly supported through Logitech software.
One review explicitly cites per-key RGB support.
One review explicitly confirms a 1,000 Hz wireless polling rate.
The standard 1000Hz polling rate is seen as sufficient for most users, but not class-leading without the optional booster.
The slim TKL shape, dongle storage, and travel-friendly framing make the keyboard easy to carry and use in tighter spaces.
Compact size helps, but multiple reviewers also note the weight and desk-bound nature of the board.
Reviews describe multiple profiles, presets, community profile sharing, or per-program configs, giving the board solid profile-management flexibility.
Reviews mention active profiles, profile switching, and saved settings, suggesting solid basic profile handling.
A review explicitly flags the absence of rapid-trigger-style features.
Reviews explicitly say rapid trigger is not included, which limits the board versus hall-effect gaming options.
Connection stability and day-to-day reliability are called out as strong.
Wireless use is repeatedly described as stable, smooth, and dropout-free in testing.
G Hub allows custom RGB effects and animations rather than limiting users to presets alone.
Reviews point to broad RGB control through onboard menus, software, and multiple presets or effects.
RGB looks clean and appealing overall, but several reviews note uneven legends or less-than-ideal consistency across the lighting.
The translucent keycaps produce vivid diffusion and a strong visual effect, though not everyone loves the styling.
The 22mm-tall low-profile TKL form factor is one of the keyboard’s clearest strengths.
Reviews consistently frame it as a compact 75% board with a good balance of keys and space savings.
G Hub is broadly seen as capable and feature-rich, with strong programming tools, though some reviews imply a learning curve.
Gear Link or web control is praised, while Armoury Crate remains divisive due to bloat, crashes, or setup friction.
Foam and layered dampening are repeatedly cited as meaningful contributors to the quieter sound.
Multi-layer foam and silicone dampening is repeatedly cited as a major contributor to the refined stock sound.
Direct stabilizer evidence is positive, with one review saying they do their job well and keep wobble low on larger keys.
Stabilizers are usually praised as lubed, stable, and rattle-free, though spacebar tuning opinions still vary by review.
Switch feel is generally praised as tactile, smooth, and satisfying for a low-profile board.
Switch feel is widely praised for smoothness, confidence, and refined stock feel.
Buyers get tactile or linear switch choices, but the scored reviews do not support a third clicky option.
Reviews confirm at least linear and clicky stock options, plus easy swapping for other MX-style switches.
Typing comfort is consistently strong once users adjust to the low-profile form factor.
Long-form typing is repeatedly described as comfortable and pleasant.
Typing feel is a standout, with reviewers describing it as fast, satisfying, and productive.
The board’s typing feel is one of its biggest strengths, with springy, refined, custom-leaning feedback.
Value is viewed as good but not unbeatable, with a lower price than pricier Logitech low-profile models offset by a few compromises.
Nearly every value discussion is negative because the board is expensive relative to strong competitors.
Volume adjustment exists through secondary keys, but the missing dial or dedicated controls is a recurring complaint.
The knob and OLED setup gives quick access to volume adjustments and related controls.
Lightspeed wireless performance is one of the product’s most consistent strengths, with repeated praise for stability and wired-like behavior.
Wireless performance is repeatedly called stable, fast, and dependable.
There is no included wrist rest, and several reviews mention that absence as a drawback even if the low profile reduces the need.
The included silicone or rubber wrist rest is frequently described as comfortable and useful.