Summary of "Tôi Xếp Hạng Một Đống Bàn Phím Cơ Năm 2024"
Overall purpose of the video
A reviewer compiles and ranks many mechanical keyboards he personally used in 2024, using a quality-vs-price criteria and a 4-tier system:
- S = best choice in its price range
- A = good, worthwhile
- B = usable but with drawbacks / not fully recommended
- (S/A/B used as the main labels; “X-ray” appears to mean lower-tier/avoid-category in places.)
He emphasizes that comparisons can be flawed, so he mostly compares within reasonable price/segment expectations.
Unique product points mentioned (keyboards and what he said)
1) IK75 (cheap low-profile keyboard)
- Price/context: bought “for 800k” (very budget), described as ~1/3 cost of similar named low-profile models (compared visually to Nufi E75 / L Flow).
- Main experience: weak sound/typing feel; shallow key travel; not standout acoustics.
- Strengths: full features including 31 connection support for Windows/iPad/phones (as claimed in subtitles).
- Verdict in his tiering: B-grade (usable, but not great).
Pros
- Lots of connectivity/features for the money
- Compact/low-profile convenience
Cons
- Weak switches/sound; shallow travel; not great overall feel
2) Reny 75 (“Ren y 75” in subtitles)
- Why notable: described as a community “pride” keyboard; “smooth ano dai finish” and many color options.
- Materials/variants: includes weight styles (steel/brushed/mirror/colored) and switch versions (JWK/HMX mentioned).
- Sound/feel: “smooth, fluid sound,” long crisp click, good modding experience.
- Weakness: difficulty finding preferred colors.
Verdict: implied top-tier recommendation (framed as a widely recognized best option; the main limitation is color availability).
3) XM X98 Pro (plastic, 100% layout)
- Price/context: around 13 million VND at the time; later X98 Pro V2 under 1 million VND.
- Typing/sound: generally up to market standards; smooth linear sound; full configuration.
- Build quality issue: plastic feels rough; keys “heavy and stiff.”
Verdict logic by price
- At ~13M VND: B-grade
- If under 1M VND (or deals): can become A-grade
- Comparison mentions “S8900” as a deal target.
4) Neo 65 (Kid Nail series mentioned)
- Positioning: “premium Chinese,” not cheap; near 3 million VND for a complete kit.
- Value comparison: more expensive than many kits, but cheaper than branded custom kits; “truly worth it.”
- Build/finish: smooth paint, refined finish, hard to fault at this price.
- Configuration/feature mention: options including 1.6-inch PCB with solderable or non-soldered weights (easy replacement).
Verdict: clearly positive; treated as strong mid-range value.
5) LMK 67 (Neo 67 referenced as unique 65% aluminum kit)
- Design: rounded style, pastel colors; “cute and lovely appearance.”
- Build/config experience: “great building experience” with full functionality/config.
- Weakness: staff/plate quality not top-tier for a kit costing nearly 2M VND.
- Switches: tested with Morandi switches from Gu Studio—praised as among the best “creamy” switches.
- Overall: great uniqueness, but plate/material expectations didn’t fully match price.
Verdict: leaning toward recommendation for the concept, with a caveat about plate quality.
6) Infi 100 (loaned by a viewer)
- Price/context: aluminum keyboard over 2M VND.
- Looks: uniquely painted sophisticated black paint with glitter.
- Sound/quality: top-notch; says no extra tuning needed for basic use.
- Design highlight: large bold switches on both sides with LED lighting.
- Use-case framing: suitable for “cool, edgy gaming setups.”
- Disappointment/Con: receiver part protrudes slightly; looks “fake and cheap” due to a screen-like design.
Verdict: “almost got an S,” but he assigns A.
7) XM M75 (arrived in Vietnam; hype)
- Improvement over X98: improved quality/build compared to earlier XM X98.
- Main complaint: price around 1M VND; critical about the value gap at that level.
Argument
- At 3M, differences of 100–200k matter less.
- At 1M, a 120k (~20%) difference is significant.
- He claims XM often prices above true value by 100–200k.
Verdict: B-segment (good and can last, but value isn’t great).
8) ATK x85 (or similar: Shimang M75 / f75 class)
- Price/context: just over 800,000 VND.
- Core specs/features mentioned:
- plastic keyboard
- knobs, gaskets
- “smooth Mao swit liner” (linear feel)
- 31 hot-swap
- RGB
- Experience: basically the same as other boards in this configuration class.
- 75% usefulness: good for typing documents + shortcuts (enough keys for work).
- Switch preference: ~45g lightweight liner switches for fast/smooth Adobe typing.
Verdict: treated as strong value due to price-performance.
9) Aula F75
- Price/context: over 1M VND, considered expensive among 75% plastics.
- Why included: he says Aula is the only one he brings to his “Tia S” setup because he values quality-price differently.
- Reasoning: higher price but higher quality; “worth it.”
Strengths called out
- “AA keyboards always have the best…”
- stable switches
- robust/thickest plastic casing
- beautifully printed keycaps
Switch feel: linear switches can be light and smooth.
Verdict: favorable enough to be considered special among 75% plastics.
10) Neo 80 / “Neil 80 Neo 80”
- Positioning: “same opinion as Neil 65” = premium experience at mid-range price.
- Switch/feature mention: “Chuki Nd7 sells very well,” compared to Reny 75 in stock situations.
- Key comparison: if Reny 75 is out of stock at the same price, he’d pick Reny 75 for better paint finish.
- Con: lacks a screen; not a deal-breaker but still a competitor weakness.
Verdict: generally positive but not top over strong alternatives.
11) Dark Alien R65 (aluminum 65% around 1M VND)
- Acceptability: acceptable for its price range.
- Deal comparison: references 2023 Sugar 65 (~1M VND kit-only) vs 2024 Dark Alien (implied ready-to-use).
- Major con: his unit has a broken stator.
Verdict: labeled B-series (open to being better if not for issues).
12) M1W Rapid Trigger (“Rapid Tricker” in subtitles; H-effect keyboard)
- Typing/listening critique: he feels H-effect keyboards don’t offer much for typing; sound is almost nonexistent—“don’t expect anything.”
- Gaming context: not aimed at hardcore FPS; framed as niche for FPS use.
- Price competitiveness: hard to compete with cheaper options like M68 (<1/3 price).
Verdict: since M1 V3 is over 3M VND, he puts it into “X-ray” (effectively low recommendation vs cheaper alternatives).
13) Kemu K87 gold-plated custom (enthusiast build)
- Context: enthusiast custom keyboard he gold-plated himself (~100k VND material cost).
- Price framing: the keyboard itself described as ~1M VND plastic.
- Build highlights: very solid; hard plastic + durable aluminum; yields solid, crisp typing with a loud click.
- Uniqueness: hard to find similar among PC gaskets.
Verdict: placed in “X-ray” in subtitles, but he still describes it as his daily driver for two months—so “X-ray” likely means “odd/off-list category,” not purely bad. (He notes tier labels are somewhat inconsistent in subtitles.)
14) F99 (compared to AA F75)
- Opinion: similar sentiment as AA F75—standard plastic quality, staff quality, feature set for price range.
- Verdict: assigns it to S (subtitle phrasing is messy, but it’s clearly intended as an S-tier for his compact segment).
15) Mg 108b (deal that confused him)
- 2023 memory: Mg 108 series in ~1M VND range; full-size 31-key RGB keyboard was a go-to then.
- 2024 situation: Mg 108b “wants to break the mold.”
- Con: cute keycaps, but typing feel is poor—slow to adapt and still not preferred.
Verdict: 2024 Mg 108b is a regrettable departure from 2023.
16) Yunji AL68 (31mm aluminum) vs Dark Alien R65
- Deal advantage: Yunji AL68 described as a good deal compared to Dark Alien R65, which costs almost double.
- Verdict reason: Yunji placed in A-series due to surface finish, billet quality, and weights.
- Counterpoint: Dark Alien may be more expensive or not match those quality cues despite better price.
Verdict: AL68 gets A.
17) Acco “OO Yu 01”
- Uniqueness: resin case + full RGB; good for “night light” setups.
- Business/strategy opinion: Acco should focus on unique keyboards rather than competing directly in low price against AA/Xinman; keep mid-range value.
- Verdict: labeled “TIA series keyboard” (subtitle says “give you a TIA series keyboard”).
Special honorary mention (highest-end “for gamers”)
Razer BlackWidow v4 Pro
- Price: nearly 5 million VND
- Specs mentioned: clicky, no hot swap, no ABS
- Why it’s expensive (his jab): implies most of the money goes into knobs/macro knobs, not core “mechanical modding” features.
Verdict: called “number one choice for gamers” (honorary mention), though his commentary is skeptical about value for enthusiasts.
Pros / Cons patterns across the review (as implied)
Pros he rewards
- High-quality finishes/paint
- Switch performance (especially “creamy,” smooth linear, crisp click where relevant)
- Good value at the price point (especially mid-range Chinese kits)
- Solid build/weights/casing thickness and reliable components
Cons that push boards down
- Poor value mismatch (overpriced relative to achievable quality)
- Bad/stiff plastic feel or inconsistent build components
- Missing expected features or niche designs that don’t help typing experience
- Defects in the reviewed unit (e.g., broken stator)
Comparisons explicitly made
- Reny 75 paint finish favored over competing Chuki Nd7 when Reny is in/out of stock
- XM X98 Pro vs XM M75: improvements acknowledged, but price-value questioned
- Dark Alien R65 vs Sugar 65: 2023 kit-only vs 2024 more ready-to-use
- M1W Rapid Trigger vs cheap M68: price-performance deemed poor
- Yunji AL68 vs Dark Alien R65: AL68 wins on finish/billet/weights despite being much cheaper
- Mg 108b (2024) vs Mg 108b (2023): series reputation disrupted by feel
Tiered recommendations (as far as subtitles clearly indicate)
-
A tier:
- Reny 75 (implied strong pick)
- Infi 100 (explicit A)
- Yunji AL68 (explicit A)
- Neo 65 / Neil 65-like praised value (not always labeled)
-
B tier:
- IK75 (explicit B)
- XM X98 Pro at 13M VND (explicit B)
- XM M75 (~1M VND) (explicit B)
- Dark Alien R65 (B-series)
-
“X-ray” / lower/avoid category:
- M1W Rapid Trigger (explicitly placed)
- Kemu K87 (placed, though it’s also described as his daily driver—tier labels look inconsistent)
Final verdict / recommendation
For most buyers following the reviewer’s “good, affordable, high-quality” mindset, the video strongly recommends mid-range “premium Chinese” builds that deliver finish + feel for the money (e.g., Reny 75, Neo 65/Kid Nail series, Yunji AL68, and Aula F75 in his framing).
He tends to avoid boards that are either:
- weak in switch/sound/feel for their price (e.g., IK75, Mg 108b 2024), or
- overpriced relative to the value (e.g., XM M75)
He also dismisses niche H-effect rapid trigger boards for non-FPS use due to typing/sound shortcomings.
Overall:
- Buy from his A-tier / strong-value picks
- Be cautious with B-tier price/value mismatches
- Skip expensive niche “gaming-only” or poorly performing boards unless they match your specific use case
Speaker views / roles
- Single main narrator/reviewer covers all boards and rankings (no clear multi-speaker dialogue breakdown in the subtitles).
- Mentions of viewers/others (e.g., one viewer comparing IK75 to “Trubin,” community consensus about Reny 75) are treated as cited opinions rather than separate speakers.
Category
Product Review
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