ブランド | ACEPHA |
---|---|
製品サイズ | 23.5 x 15.8 x 3.99 cm; 521.63 g |
商品モデル番号 | T9 Pro |
メーカーにより製造中止になりました | いいえ |
商品の寸法 幅 × 高さ | 23.5 x 15.8 x 4 cm |
同梱バッテリー | いいえ |
商品の重量 | 522 g |
ACEPHA T9プロゲーミングキーボードキー、プログラム可能な7色LEDバックライト、抗疲労リスト片手用のゲームパッド 黒
ブランド | ACEPHA |
対応デバイス | タブレット, スマートフォン |
接続技術 | USB |
キーボードの説明 | ゲーム |
商品の推奨用途 | ゲーミング |
特徴 | バックライト付き |
キーの数 | 29 |
付属コンポーネント | USBケーブル |
手の向き | 左右共用 |
ボタンの数 | 29 |
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商品の情報
詳細情報
登録情報
ASIN | B06ZY5GJ7X |
---|---|
おすすめ度 |
5つ星のうち3.4 |
Amazon 売れ筋ランキング | - 265,793位パソコン・周辺機器 (パソコン・周辺機器の売れ筋ランキングを見る) - 3,405位ゲーミングキーボード |
Amazon.co.jp での取り扱い開始日 | 2017/6/1 |
ご意見ご要望
商品の説明
ACEPHA T9 PRO ゲーミングキーパッド
片手でゲームをコントロールするプログラムブルゲーム用キーパッド
製品仕様:
押下圧:55±10g
キーの取り外しに必要な力: ≥ 1.0Kg
キーの寿命:≥1000万回
使用電圧:5V
使用電流:≤200mA
総重量:520g
接続:USB有線接続
USBケーブル:1.8m
内容物:
1×日本語配列ゲーミングキーパッド
1×日本語配列取扱説明書
1×ドライバ
正品保証:
一年間で製品不良の場合は商品到着後12月以内、交換を対応しております
7色のバックライト付き
赤、青、緑、緑と黄、紫、
7種類のバックライト、
常にあなたが好きな色があります
ESC+TAB→調光ボタン
快適な人間工学のデザイン
ゲームをプレイするとき、手はプレイヤーの広い肩(約500-650mmの距離の間の手)
よりも通常はわずかに大きいより快適な位置であり
片手でキーボードを使用することで、プレイヤーの腕を自然に、素早く、柔軟に
伸ばすことができます
明度調整可能な7色のLEDバックライト:
バックライトは気分によって違う色に変更できます
ESC+TABは7色変換できます。
ESC+W: 明度のアップ
ESC+S: 明度ダウン
ESC+Shiftバックライトの呼吸モード/オン/オフ
新しいシャフト構造 機械的なキーボードのような楽しみ
優れた潤滑性、快適感
優れた耐摩耗性、長寿命
MACROカスタム設定
シングルキー設定
キーの組み合わせ設定
マルチメディア設定
機能キー設定
対応OS:Windows XP/ Windows Vista / Windows 7 / Windows 8に交換性があります
特定の情報をお探しですか?
イメージ付きのレビュー
-
トップレビュー
上位レビュー、対象国: 日本
レビューのフィルタリング中に問題が発生しました。後でもう一度試してください。
シフトキーが頼りなくカシャカシャと最初から大げさな音がしたり高いとこから落としてしまったり猫のげーげーをくらいながらも、今のこの日までは壊れなかった。
シフトキーが認識しなくなりとうとうお別れの日・・・・入賞までお供してくれた君に感謝です。できれば連載まで君と頑張りたかった!!
ゲームに関してはキーの反り返しが大きくて使えなかったですね
下段にZXC VBNが欲しかったです(★-1)。
画像のように、ボタンをばらし、使っています。
ボタンの高さが異なるので、好みで配置を考えるといいですね。
Zbrush のキーボードとして使っています。慣れてきたらいい感じです。
下段にZXC VBNが欲しかったです(★-1)。
画像のように、ボタンをばらし、使っています。
ボタンの高さが異なるので、好みで配置を考えるといいですね。
Zbrush のキーボードとして使っています。慣れてきたらいい感じです。
追記:
Windows再インストールしてドライバー入れなおしたらなぜかキー設定できなくなった。zがないのでゴミ。
(※恐ろしく価格上がってますけど、自分が買った時は2千円台のものがセールで1990円くらいでした。価格変動にご注意)
今まで薄いパンタグラフテンキーを使っていたので、第一印象はでっか!!でした。
良い面
・重量感があるので、ずれない、ガタつかない
・手を置くパッドの居心地が良くて驚いた。テンキーでは手は机に直だったので、戻れないかも…?
・キーの打鍵感がある(うるさいけど、存外押してて気持ち良かった。ただ薄型テンキーと比べると連打はしにくい)
・キーがいっぱいある
win7で付属CDで割当楽々でした。使ってて気になったらすぐ変更出来る。
テンキーの場合イラスト用ソフトウェア側で割当してたので、BSやTABキー等には割当不可能だったけど、関係なく割当可能なのが良かった。
悪い面
・でかい。手が小さいので定位置に置いた状態では全てのキーには届かない(承知の上買ったのでOKです)
・Spaceキーの打鍵音が特にうるさい
最初アンドゥを割当したけど、普通に押せるけど若干の引っ掛かりが気になり、結局出番の少ないものを割り当ててる。存在意義が…!
押した感じ「バコ!」という感じです。軽く押せたら良かったなあ。無意識中で押すには引っ掛かりが気になってちょっと辛いですね。
ゲームではたくさん押すからこういう配置と形になってるんでしょうけど、押し心地が悪い上にうるさいので、もっと小さくても良かったのではとは思いました。でも他レビュー読むと個体差かもしれないですね。
一度レビュー書いてからSpaceキーを外してみました。外しにくくて一部ヒビ入っちゃったけど(笑)、中のフック(?)を引っ掛けずに上に置いているような状態にしたら、ちょっと浮いててペコペコするけど問題なく押せるし、押し心地が軽くなってコレで良いやってなりました。安いからショック受けずに出来る事ですが…
体の一部として末永く使用していくかは何ともですが、気分転換的に新鮮で良かったです。
以下、realforceとの比較になります。
良い点
・サイズが小さい。
・光る。
悪い点
・メンブレンのためキーの押し心地が悪い。
特にスペースキーは本体に引っかかり押したつもりでも押せてない始末。
・パームレストが邪魔。かえって手が疲れる。
以上の悪い点がFPS用としては致命的で、3ゲームほど使った後お蔵入りしました。
何か他に有効な活用法はないものでしょうか・・・
僕の場合はゲーム用途では無く、お絵かき用にと思い購入しています。
付属のCDからユーティリティーソフトをインストール後、ボタンをカスタマイズしていく事になると思います。
ちょっと気になった点は僕の場合はメーカーサイトが見つけられませんでしたので、バージョンアップやソフトのダウンロードがどこでするのかわかりませんでした。
耐久性はまだわかりませんが、ケーブルも布で巻いてあり、掌の部分に当たる部分も滑り止めでゴム加工がちゃんとしてあったりと安っぽくない感じです。
文字の印字部分や親指部分にあたる大きなボタンが若干残念でしが、コストパフォーマンスを考えると十分だと思います。
ボタンはカチカチッっと結構固く、音がします。
SHIFTキーやTAB、ALTキーが慣れないと結構押し間違えましたが、ソフト側でボタンを好きなキーに変更できますので、使いやすいように割り振れば特に問題にならないと思います。
キーの反応などは、特に気になった所はありませんでした。(親指部分の大きなボタン部分が若干押しにくい感じ?)
キーの割り振りも3つほど切り替えができるようなので、ゲームやその他のように用意しておくと更に使いやすいと思います。まだ使ってませんが、マクロも作れるようです。
大変満足しています。
人生初ゲーミングキーボードと言うことで試しにと安価なこのキーボードにしました!
接続できるか不安でしたが、VENOMXというコンバーターを介してPS4に接続できました。
不具合などなく快適に動いております!
サイズも場所を取らず丁度いいです!
安価な割に安っぽさがなくデザインも好きなのでとても気に入っています!
不満な点として少しガタつきます。
改善策としてキーボード背面前方に何か挟んであげるとガタつきが解消されます。
ボタンの中心あたりを角度がつかないように押さないとキーがフチに引っかかります
せっかく大きめなボタンなのに中心から逸れた所を押してしまうと引っかかってボタンが押せません
FPSでジャンプに設定して使ってますがジャンプ失敗によるミスがとにかく増えました
このままだと使いモノにならないので分解してボタンまわりを削ってやろうか迷ってます
以下 追記)
上記のレビューを見て販売のCheerivo JPさんから、新しい物を送るのでそれで試してほしいとのメールを頂きました
結果、新しく送ってもらった物は特に引っかかりもなく快適にスペースキーが押せました
対応も早く、商品も問題なしなので星2から星5に修正しました
他の国からのトップレビュー
I've been looking for programmable keypads to bind macros and shortcuts for applications like photoshop for a while. They're on average fairly expensive. In came this.
I wasn't holding super high expectations for 20-ish dollars, but it's more than proven its worth.
Hardware:
The whole thing's plastic with laser etched painted keycaps. The plastic itself feels VERY sturdy and not at all cheap with no creaks, cracks, or flex and the keycaps are pretty standard for most backlit keyboards with the likes of razer and corsair doing similar.
It's using rubber domes with a plastic Cherry MX-compatible slider on top. Frankly, I've felt few rubber dome keyboards that feel as nice as this, not as good as true mechanical, but it's not at all bad, and for the price, it's really nice.
The sliders mean that it is entirely possible to replace MOST the keycaps on this. Each cap is a standard size, so if you get a full set of blank caps, you should be able to reface this, but with regular keycaps, keys like the P key are much larger than normal, meaning that you'd need to use another cap in its place.
Software
Out of the box, it's a plug-n-play keyboard, but very limited for obvious size reasons.
The software is pretty lightweight and easy to install. Once it's installed, there's almost no text on it, but it's fairly self explanatory and the instructions for the device clear may've had, but i could figure it out mostly on my own.
Binding macros and key shortcuts is fairly easy and the fact that ALL the buttons are reprogrammable is nice. I draw often and have the large space bar key triangle thing bound to undo for most my programs.
I'd say it's really good if you use the software and windows. Otherwise it's a very limited keyboard with little practical use.
Now from a gaming aspect of use, I, for the life of me, could NOT get used to the shift and ctrl keys shifted up, making it near useless for me in that regard. I didn't buy it for that, so it does not bother me one bit.
Only wish is that keys were actual cherry mx or some actual mechanical clone. But my hands are virgin to mechanical so POM keys feel great.
Oh to top it off? The driver doesn't work! Tried the disk and the website and both say "KEYBOARD DRIVER V1.0" it never works. The driver opens and seems to run but no customization or anything.
For the record, I'm evaluating this after having used a Logitech G13 gameboard, as well as a Belkin N52 (and the N52te), plus a Razar pad much like the N52. The last gameboard I had was the Logitech G13, and it failed utterly after 6 months due to massive durability issues. That's another review you can read if you want.
So, I got this with "lowered expectations" since a replacement for any of the previous gameboards/pads I've used is pointlessly expensive. This was, well, cheap. And I expect it to perform cheaply. I got the extended warranty, because no gameboard I've ever had has ever lasted 4 years. It's relatively cheap, and I get my money back/replacement when, not if, it fails. That worked for me.
Like I said, "lowered expectations".
So, knowing I don't have a "joystick function" and not dissing this at all for lacking one, I'm looking at a straight-up game board with fully programmable keys that can take a certain amount of "punishment". I tried a programmable keyboard, but since I am a writer, and I dislike loud keyboards, I would NEVER use a gaming keyboard to type with unless I wanted to make neighbors think I'm using fully automatic weapons. I don't beat on game pads, but I often do game for 8 hours (or more) a day when I'm not working on another novel. It helps me relax, and that's kind of the metric I'm using here. After reading reviews about this one, (and others) I settled on it because its key layout was the closest to what I was last using (the Logitech G13), and it had fully programmable keys. That made me think the muscle memory learning curve would be lower and help me adapt to it faster.
Another note: I have a Logitech G600 gaming mouse as well, and it can handle functions that I was relying on my game pad to do by swapping functions between them. What the T9 couldn't do, the G600 could, and if it was just a matter of swapping a single key function, I did that.
A final preface note is that I do not care about "lighting". I don't look at it when I'm gaming. I'm looking at the screen. As a (what others describe as an exceptionally elite) gamer, I really see no point to LOOKING at these things. If you have to look where your fingers are, your character's death in the game is to be expected. It starts up in a default "red" and it stayed there. The lights do little to illuminate the keys, but since I use muscle memory and position, and not vision to play, it doesn't matter.
ALL of that as an explanation as to where I am. I hope that provides some perspective to what I want, what I need and why.
I've had this for a whopping 3 hours, and figured first impressions are important.
Set-up:
It comes with a CD. It's a coaster, and I didn't try to use it. The recommended way of dealing with it is to says go to the site, download the drivers AND INSTALL THEM FIRST. This I did. My AV program went nuts (it keeps wanting to virtualize everything new), but that's what it always does for ANYTHING, so that was a typical annoyance. Might want to disable yours when installing and running for the first time in case that's an issue. I just forgot to. Google "ACEPHA T9 Pro drivers" and you'll get there.
Assuming you have a non-stupid AV program, this shouldn't be an issue. Just install the driver first. It's probably a major hassle if you don't.
In use:
After that, it's pretty basic. The macros don't seem to quite work right, but I don't use many, and don't really NEED them. I pushed the ones I do use often to the G600 (which seems to work better for simultaneous key functions), and transferred that single-key function to the T9. If you want MACROS, the T9 may not perform as you expect/hope. Just a heads-up there. For single-key remapping of the keys, this does a very credible job, and for ME, that's all I need.
Your mileage may vary.
The interface for programming keys is very basic and not intuitive, but if you've done that kind of thing before, you shouldn't have any problems. Mostly, it's click on the key, select what you want, and enter the key(s), then apply to make it work.
So overall, it's doing pretty much exactly what I want/expected.
As for size, it's somewhat wiser than the G13, but not longer, so it fit into its space without any problems. Think about 1/3 of an extended keyboard, and that's what you get. I had considered a fully programmable, micro gaming keyboard, and this one was a better fit. So overall, there's not a lot to hate about it after three hours. It lives up to expectations.
It SEEMS to be durably built, being relatively heavy and seemingly well constructed. I don't expect the huge silver "space bar" to work well (that looks like a thumb rest in the images), since it's so large, and I remapped that to something I use, but not as often nor as critically as a space bar. I have that mapped to my mouse, or just use my normal keyboard. To be honest, I've never had a good response from ANY game pad for the space bar, so I don't consider this anything different from the norm.
The FOUR stars as opposed to five is for some other issues that it has, and it hasn't yet proven itself, though in a way it sort of has.
The down-sides:
The feet on the bottom aren't very "sticky" and it can slide around. That's less of an issue for a straight keypad kind of device than one with a joystick, but it's annoying when it makes a break for freedom from a careless hand placement. I recommend some kind of sticky foam or other option to better hold it in place on a smooth surface.
The fact the macros only seem to work on individual keystrokes (mostly one key after the other) and not key combos could be an issue for a lot of folks, but that may be a lack of familiarity with the way it displays or the non-intuitive way the thing is set-up. I'll probably revisit that later. The macro editor is decent, but doesn't seem to say SHIFT + T, and you can't label ANYTHING on the UI for an "at a glance" view of what a key is supposed to do (if you've changed it).
Still it's doing what I expect it to do. I've not restarted the computer to find out if it HOLDS a profile (which some have said it doesn't), which would make me take a star away. So I'll be revisiting this review to add to it.
If you're looking for something that might skitter away from your hand if you don't hold it in place, might not do macros very well, might not be durable, and might not hold a profile (which can easily be re-applied) between computer starts, this does that job and it's not COMPLETELY stupid in what it does. For single-key rebinding in a convenient 1/3 size, it does the job. Since that's what I EXPECTED, then I can't say I'm at all disappointed by its performance.
The upsides:
I went wandering into a game to try it out with another player who wasn't handicapped at all by a learning curve for their control system, and her characters died, while mine didn't.
Not once.
So, it will probably work out once i get used to it.
But I expect I can adapt. I have done some modifications to help me with that (some tape on certain keys for hand placement, and a clear piece of hard plastic packaging keeping my fingers from straying into areas that aren't what they used to be) and it's a learning process. The "just right" configuration is almost there as well.
Give me a few months and I'll be back for an update, focusing on any starting issues, play issues and durability. If what I wrote so far helps, all the better. Consider the rating provisional, until I say otherwise.
I actually got this for work rather than gaming, since we use an antiquated ERP system with CTRL+button shortcuts all over the keyboard. Setting up macros to these shortcuts makes it go so much faster. Honestly, there can be many uses for this. A few examples are gaming, programs with lots of keyboard shortcuts, and saving parts of usernames or passwords. For example, if you have a 20 character password, assign 4 keys to 5 letters each, and you only have to remember and type 4 keys, while having the strength of a 20 character password. The software could be a little more straightforward, but with a little playing around, isn't too hard to figure out. Another good thing is that unlike many other cheap products out there, this is actually a solid and durable keypad that doesn't feel like it will break with the slightest gust of wind.
Some complaints: the keys (in particular the spacebar) can be sticky or hard to press, the keys are set up in kind of a weird layout that takes some getting used to, and it seems like the power to it cuts out momentarily every once in a while, setting the color back to solid red. However, for the value you get, this product is completely worth it.
Edit 9/9/2018: Since I've bought this product a year ago, my 5-star review above has been accurate. However, this past week, my work computer started getting BSOD's. After doing some troubleshooting, I found that the driver for this device was the cause. This could just be a conflict with either a recent windows update or other driver update, but this is highly disruptive to my workflow, so I will have to find a replacement for this device. It's highly unlikely that the manufacturer will ever release an update to their driver, since the driver on their website is still 1.0.0, the original version from years ago. If you can get it to work, then the cheap price and ability to program any of the keys is an absolute bargain. Otherwise, you will probably have to find another product.