![]() It not only wiggles the actual switch, but it in turn wiggles the keycap as well. The third point is that while I really appreciate Razer for improving the switch feel, it still has a lot of like wiggle room inside the frame. I get that it might conflict and kind of ruin the whole clean aesthetic of the keyboard, but the value-add element is just not there with the Huntsman Mini. The second point of advantage for Ducky would be the additional value-add keycaps, and this is something that would be fantastic for Razer to include, like a Razer green escape key or something for the function key. ![]() However, for FPS gaming I had nothing but pleasure with the Huntsman Mini. As with the Huntsman TE, the switches are incredibly light, so you have to train not to accidentally depress the keys with just the weight of your fingers. It not only mutes the sound, but it also softens out all the bottoming out strokes. Instead, you have this really satisfying density when you bottom out, equivalent to something like on Leopold keyboards where they put this felt carpet inside the frame. Normally, if you were to put dampeners on the MX stem you would have that little bottoming out effect that this kind of squishy, but none of that is present here which is awesome. The improvement really comes from the lubing to smooth out on how the switch travels, and also the silicon dampener is not effecting how the switch feels. The Huntsman TE with the Gen2 switches would be my perfect gaming TKL keyboard. I really wish that the TE was also updated with the Gen2 switches, because I can tell you 100% the Gen2 feels so much better. Aside from the space saving advantages you get with a 60% keyboard, the new and improved keys are really the main advantage of getting the Huntsman Mini over the Huntsman TE.
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