One direct review describes the Q3 HE 8K switches as having a soft typing sound, pointing to pleasant but not aggressively damped acoustics.
Reviewers praise the GX87’s stock sound as a standout, describing it as refined, lively, and unusually satisfying for a prebuilt board.
The direct coverage emphasizes fine-grained actuation tuning, with 0.1mm-level adjustment and very high sensitivity.
One review specifically says the switches deliver a consistent key press.
Analog-style input is explicitly supported through Analog Mode, which the review frames as controller-like variable input.
One direct review shows adjustable lighting brightness and notes the board can be run at full brightness.
Battery life is a clear strength, with multiple reviews calling out the large 8,000mAh capacity and very long runtime.
Both direct Q3 HE 8K reviews present the board as strongly built, highlighting an all-metal body and a durable, stable feel.
Multiple reviewers describe the GX87 as very well built, with strong assembly, solid casework, and no obvious quality-control issues.
One direct review calls out a nice included USB cable and adapter, suggesting the wired package feels solid rather than bare-bones.
One video calls the included cable cheap and unimpressive.
Direct Q3 HE 8K coverage supports broad cross-platform use, with Windows, Mac, and Linux compatibility mentioned across the reviews.
Key mappings are described as persisting across multiple devices, which supports multi-device use.
The scored Q3 HE 8K evidence points to a wired connection path, with USB Type-C and reviewer setup focused on wired mode.
The board offers Bluetooth and 2.4GHz wireless modes, but one review also reports minor connectivity issues.
Both direct reviews emphasize deep tuning, from web-based controls to per-key behavior changes and actuation setup.
Reviewers consistently say the GX87 is easy to customize, thanks to straightforward disassembly and mod-friendly design, with one video also mentioning swappable top colors.
The direct evidence describes the Q3 HE 8K as an 80% board, which supports a relatively space-conscious desk footprint compared with larger layouts.
The TKL layout is described as saving desk space versus full-size boards while keeping a familiar key set.
One direct review specifically ties the aluminum body to better resistance to physical damage.
One review explicitly says the GX87 feels built to last.
The direct evidence supports reasonably easy switch work because the board is explicitly described as hot-swappable.
Switch replacement is described as very easy because switches can be removed and replaced without soldering.
One direct review says the keycap shaping gives the board a more ergonomic feel.
The fixed typing angle is presented as standard enough that it should not bother most users.
The direct reviews highlight a strong gaming feature set, including snap action, last-key priority, analog-style input, and multi-action keystrokes.
A dedicated ultra low latency mode is explicitly mentioned in the software.
Both direct reviews tie the metal construction to a stable, rigid overall feel.
The chassis is praised for having no flex or rattles, though one video notes the quick-release design may feel less rigid than a screwed-in case.
Both direct reviews frame the Q3 HE 8K as a gaming-first board that can provide a real edge in play.
Reviewers say the GX87 handles gaming well, especially for hybrid work-and-play use, even if it is not framed as a specialist Hall Effect board.
Hot-swap support is present, but the direct evidence also shows that compatibility is not especially broad.
Hot-swap support is clearly confirmed across reviews, making switch swaps part of the board’s appeal.
The direct reviews point to solid keycap execution through double-shot PBT and thoughtful shaping.
One review specifically praises the included PBT keycaps as high quality.
One direct review explicitly praises super-fast response times.
One review says the switches feel fairly responsive in play.
One direct review explicitly describes the board as delivering ultra-low latency.
Latency is framed positively for normal gaming use, with reviewers noting reduced latency concerns and immediate-feeling keypresses.
The direct evidence identifies the board as an 80% layout, supporting a compact but not ultra-small format.
Both direct reviews describe strong macro support, from custom macro programming to bundling multiple actions into one press.
Macro support is explicitly mentioned as part of the board’s deeper customization toolkit.
Both direct reviews speak positively about the materials, especially the aluminum chassis and overall premium feel.
The materials are consistently praised, especially the aluminum chassis and PBT keycaps, with one reviewer also highlighting the smooth finish.
The direct evidence points to useful knob-based media-style control, with one review also noting knob remapping in software.
The only direct sound commentary says the switches have a soft typing sound, which suggests moderate noise rather than a harsh report.
The sound profile is described as muted rather than sharply loud, keeping the board’s thock controlled.
One direct review says the keyboard can store up to three profiles, supporting limited onboard storage.
Customizations are explicitly described as being stored on the keyboard itself.
Direct Q3 HE 8K coverage confirms per-key lighting hardware, with each key described as having south-facing backlighting.
Both direct reviews make 8K polling a headline strength and treat it as a major performance differentiator.
The keyboard is repeatedly described as running at 1,000Hz, with one video also discussing a low-latency mode.
One direct review measures the board at 1886g, so portability looks like a clear weakness rather than a strength.
Its heavy all-metal build makes it less convenient to carry around or reposition frequently.
One direct review says the board can store three profiles and switch among them from a rear toggle.
Both direct reviews confirm rapid trigger support and present it as part of the competitive feature set.
One review reports rare duplicate key registrations and a fringe long-hold input issue, so reliability is good but not flawless.
The direct evidence supports meaningful RGB control, including multiple lighting zones and adjustable effects.
Lighting customization exists and can be adjusted, but the experience is not unanimously polished, with one review calling it clunky.
One direct review says the lighting can produce high-contrast combinations that make a setup pop.
The direct evidence describes an 80% form factor, keeping the board compact without collapsing into a tiny layout.
The GX87 is explicitly described as an 80% TKL, giving it a compact-but-not-tiny footprint.
Both direct reviews speak well of the web-based configurator, emphasizing remapping depth and the lack of software downloads.
Software support is generally seen as good for the category, with QMK/VIA support and dedicated software, though one reviewer still found VIA basic.
Internal foam and damping layers are specifically credited with reducing ping and cleaning up the typing sound.
Stabilizers are mixed but acceptable overall: one review says they are nearly silent, while another wanted a bit more lube.
One direct review says the switches deliver a stable and responsive typing feel.
The stock linear switches are described as satisfying, bouncy, crisp, and snappy in everyday use.
Hot-swap exists, but one direct review clearly says switch choice is restricted to Keychron’s own Ultra-Fast Lime Magnetic switches.
Switch choice at purchase is limited, with one review explicitly noting only two similar linear options and no tactile choice.
One direct review says the keycap profile hugs the fingers, supporting comfortable longer use once adapted to the shape.
Typing comfort is positively described, with reviewers calling out a soft, bouncy, comfort-focused feel.
One direct review directly praises the Q3 HE 8K typing feel as stable and responsive.
Typing feel is strongly positive, with reviewers describing the GX87 as joyful, smooth, and satisfying to type on.
Reviews repeatedly frame the GX87 as unusually strong value, pairing premium-feeling features with a budget-friendly price.
One direct review explicitly shows a dedicated volume knob.
Wireless behavior is praised for reconnecting quickly after idle and feeling responsive in use.