

Getting our first look at the keyboard itself, on the surface it does look quite similar to the BlackWidow Chroma V2 in terms of the overall design language, as the keyboard retains the same sort of look with the sharp edges and extended front bezel. Inside, we find a few extras including one quick start guide, one welcome card, and then three small stickers. The Razer BlackWidow comes in a box that will look familiar to anyone who has previously owned a Razer product – a large image of the keyboard itself is visible from the front, while the sides of the box are coloured in Razer's signature green.


N-key roll-over with built-in anti-ghosting.Hybrid On-Board Memory and Cloud Storage – up to 5 profiles.Razer Chroma™ customizable backlighting with 16.8 million color options.Razer™ Green Mechanical Switches designed for gaming.It may not be as feature-rich as the BlackWidow Elite, but for the £119.99 MSRP you still get a full-size board with Razer's own mechanical switches, per-key Chroma lighting and Synapse 3 software support. In any case, this will no doubt become known as the ‘BlackWidow (2019)' model and it is definitely a keyboard worth reviewing. Now, I have to admit I am not sure whether releasing a keyboard known only as the Razer BlackWidow – the same name as the OG board from 2010 – is simplifying things or actually complicating them further.
#Does razer still have fl studio keys full size
That's why Razer is trying to simplify matters by releasing a new, full size board known simply as the ‘BlackWidow'. With such a large range of keyboards all coming under the same BlackWidow family, things understandably get a bit confusing for the consumer. Razer has released a whole host of BlackWidow keyboards over the years – from the original back in 2010 that didn't even have RGB lighting, right up to the BlackWidow Elite that is decked out with pretty much every feature you could wish for.
