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Well Linux Supported Keyboard and Peripherals?

Hej hej,

I'm on the lookout for a new keyboard and mouse for my gaming and development sessions on Linux. Was therefore wondering if people here have some experience in this field in terms of recommendations. Personally quite tied to quiet keyboards, i like low-profiles but its not a must. Mainly looking for something that is well supported on Linux and keyboard. Or if anyone has any other nice to have peripherals they want to recommend then I'm all ears!

My keyboard requirements;

  • Must support Nordic ISO layout
  • Must be linear switches or at least quiet keys.
  • Must be 100% or 96% in size

Any tips or recommendations are welcome <3

29 comments
  • Keychron K4v2 with SonixQMK can be customized to anything you want. I daily it in Linux and windows. I game in Linux, and work in windows (bleh) but I still want Macro's to pass the HID port on my KVM so I just build custom key codes.

    Any of the QMK/VIA supported boards are great in linux, so find the layout, and style you want. The K series are the older ones and they require more effort to get QMK running since they run on the Sonix/Evision MCU.

    As for mice, i have a Glorious D- because I have small hands, and its fine. I could control it with OpenRGB but I dont care enough and it gets messy with a KVM.

    • The Glorious mouse is a pain in the ass. It literally prevents my laptop from booting sometimes when it's plugged in.

      Keychron, however, I can back 100%. I have two of their C2 wired mechanicals, one with white backlight and one without. I use the backlit one on my personal gaming machine and use the non-backlit one on my work machine in the office. Sometimes gaming is in the dark but work never is. They make a very well built keyboard. Robust, easy to repair when anything goes wrong.

      • The glorious was a replacement for my razor death adder which lived up to it's name and died. It was also even worse with Linux and a KVM. Plus it's software was behind required account.

        It's fine but I'm just using it as a dumb mouse.

    • Problem is a lot of vendors that used to use Sonix/EVision chips have switched to Sinowealth or other chips during the chip shortage and haven't switched back. They do this without changing the model numbers. Sinowealth's chip is inferior in every way and does not have any QMK port so if you get stuck with a new PCB revision you're screwed.

      I can't recommend anyone try to buy a Sonix/EVision board anymore for this reason unfortunately. It was awesome when every cheap keyboard on the market had one of these chips though.

      • I yield to the world expert, also Hi Calc, nice to see you on the fediverse!

        My understanding is that Keychron stuck with Sonix/Evision on the K series, but yes my D- is sinowealth which is part of why I dont bother tweaking it.

    • Alrighty nice one!

  • Just chiming in to say that any ISO keyboard can be whatever flavor of ISO you pick, based on your selection in the OS. You may want keycaps to match, but that’s really it, as far as hardware goes.

  • I bought a Havit keyboard which is considered half mechanical a couple of years ago. Maybe they have something similar or even more silent now.

  • I use g915 tactile, and it works just fine. Noise level depends on how hard you type.

    I have never had an issue with keyboards or mice not working, just plug and play

    I can also recommend Logitech MX Mechanical as a good alternative.

    edit: both piper and openRGB works to control the unicorn vomit. Piper also works to set the macro keys.

  • If you want something budget for a mouse, I got the darmoshark m3. It's only $43, 58 grams, works wired, with a dongle, and through Bluetooth, 1000 hz polling rate, and it works out of the box with no software required. It has buttons on the bottom of the mouse to switch DPI and polling rate. Just make sure you set it to 1000 hz since it's set to 500 hz by default I believe

29 comments