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The keyboard looks like something you might see on the bridge of thenew Battlestar Galactica, thanks to the multi-tapper’s angular shape,dashboard control panel and groups of backlit keys. The red, green andamber backlights are designed to highlight the most frequently usedgaming keys, such as the spacebar - should you have forgotten, midfirst-person shooter frenzy, where it is.
Cyborg’s dashboard, mounted up above the keys, is touch-sensitiveand allows the keyboard to be instantly converted from a normal,Office-friendly keyboard and into one designed especially for gaming,although it doesn’t change shape like a Transformers robot, alas, even though it looks like it might.
For example, gaming mode disables the Windows Start menu keys in case you press them accidentally during a Far Cry session.
Saitek's Cyborg keyboard: backlit keys, touch-sensitive dashboard, but no cupholder
Gaming mode allows users to alter which keys are backlit, whatcolour they are and how brightly they shine – because nothing shoulddistract your attention from the on-screen action.
Different set-up preferences can be recorded using software bundledwith the keyboard. Complex commands, such as infinite ammo cheats, canbe assigned to a single key, removing the need for you to remember A,B, B, X, P, Q, 4, I, 9 etc.
The Cyborg keyboard is available now for around £60 (€80/$120)