When I couldn’t pair my HyperX Wrist Rest with the MX Mechanical, I was very frustrated. If you don’t use a wrist rest, this won’t matter to you, but I can’t live without one. The case sides and back are the same dark gray plastic while the area under the keys is a matte aluminum plate.Ī shorter keyboard means that you can’t use a standard-height wrist or palm rest, because you don’t want a rest that’s too tall and forces you to poke downward at your keys. The thin keys are two shades of gray with letters and numbers having the lighter hue and special / modifier keys getting the darker one. The Logitech MX Mechanical and MX Mechanical Mini share a boring, but professional aesthetic that looks fairly premium and won’t offend or excite anyone. However, you have to be comfortable with a low-profile design, which limits your choice of wrist rests. In either form factor, the keyboards offer a typing experience that’s on par with many of the best wireless keyboards, a ton of customization options and easy switching between PCs. We tested with two units: an MX Mechanical with blue switches and an MX Mechanical Mini with browns. Both keyboards are low-profile and available with a choice of clicky blue, linear red or tactile quiet brown low-profile switches, all of which are made by Kailh. The $169 Logitech MX Mechanical is a full-size, 110-key keyboard while the $149 MX Mini offers a more compact layout with just 84 keys. Now, Logitech has introduced the MX Mechanical and MX Mechanical Mini, two wireless MX keyboards that use Flow and come with a choice of mechanical switches. But no one who is serious about their typing would lay fingers on a non-mechanical keyboard if there was a better option. Up until now, if you wanted a wireless keyboard that would work with Logi Flow, you were limited to Logitech’s MX Keys series.
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