Hands-on with Ideazon's Zboard gaming keyboard

Curious? Keep reading!

Regardless of the keyset, the Zboard's keys are fully customizable. Each key can be remapped through a simple graphical interface showing a picture of your keyboard and allowing you to drag and drop commands to each key. Zboard's software also allows you to easily create macros that will let you to preform multiple in-game functions at the press of a button. All you have to do is record your actions once and you can map them to a single key for future usage.
As an aside: in the past, there has been some question of keyboards with such macro functionality leading to game bans. I can safely tell you that the use of the Zboard keyboard will not get you banned. However, using the Zboard keyboard to make macros that will allow you to play the game while not at your keyboard would be considered botting by Blizzard, and that's a bannable offence. Forum MVP Palehoof clarifies the situation, "If you're using a device like that to simulate player actions, and you are not present or do not need to be present for those actions to take place, then that's botting and you can be banned for it. If you're using a device like that to automate actions you would be taking anyway, and are at your keys making it happen, that that is not." The macro functionality can make your game life much easier, but don't use it to make the game so easy that you can play Rock Band in the other room while your macros do the tedious work of raising weapon skills for you.
The Zboard package (selling for about $50) comes with a driver disc, a wrist-rest, a Zboard base, a standard keyboard layout keyset, and a generic gaming keyset. The gaming layout features oversized directional keys (forward, backward, left, right, strafe left, and strafe right) with a concave surface and a "butterfly" formation on the left-hand side. Surrounding these are 20 easily reachable keys, either set for standard game functions or programmable for your convenience. This setup is ideal for having your left hand on the keyboard and your right hand on the mouse, with enough hotkeys in reach of your left hand to make all but the most macro-happy of us content. And in case you find yourself needing to type/chat, there's also a standard size keyboard to the right of this setup -- though the spacing between some of the keys is a bit odd, apparently to accomidate the keyset hinges (which allow your keyset to fold up neatly when not in use).

I imagine some of you are wondering what the point of a Zboard is when World of Warcraft has a huge amount of customized functionality available with addons and macros -- no special software required. Couldn't you just use your existing keyboard? Of course you could, but the Zboard offers some distinct advantages over any do-it-yourself solution:
- With a standard keyboard, you wouldn't be able to do as much as a Zboard, because built-in WoW macros have a number of limitations. For example, you cannot string together multiple skills in a single macro if each skill triggers the global cooldown. WoW will cast the first skill and then immediately try to cast the second. The second, of course, will never be cast because the first triggered the global cooldown. Zboard macros can be configured with any necessary delays to allow you to string together complex sequences of skills at the press of a button. (Again -- you can use this for convenience as long as you don't allow the Zboard macros play the game for you.)
- If you don't know a lot about WoW's macros (or if you're like me and don't have the patience to figure it out), the Zboard's ability to create macros is as simple as you can get -- just do what you want to do in-game, have your Zboard software record it, and bind it to a key of your choice using a graphical interface.
- The Zboard has more customizable hotkeys than you're likely to find on the keyboard that was included with your computer.
- The Zboard's ability to use differing keysets shines if you play a lot of different games. You can quickly swap keysets to one designed and configured with your game's hotkeys and macros when you move from one game to another.
- For a gaming keyboard, it's reasonably priced at about $45, though with additional keysets the cost starts to add up.
- If you like the Zboard's standard gaming keyset, you may like Ideazon's Merc keyboard, which has the same layout for the left-hand with oversized directional keys surrounded by programmable hotkeys. It's larger than a standard keyboard, with the directional keys to the left of a full-sized keyboard. It also has the same macro functionality as the Zboard. The Merc retails at around $40, or you can get the Merc Stealth, which has the same layout and functionality as the Merc, but with backlighting (in your choice of three colors), USB & audio ports, and a few other features for about $75.
- Logitech offers the G15 keyboard, a keyboard with a fairly standard key configuration plus several programmable hotkeys. The G15 offers macroing functionality similar to Ideazon's offerings and the keys are backlit. But the best feature of the G15 is the small LCD display (five lines of text) mounted on the keyboard: you can configure the LCD to display different game information, like health, combat stats, or who's talking in Ventrillo. It retails for about $80.
- Razer offers several gaming keyboards along with their better known line of gaming mice. All keyboards have a standard key configuration with macro ability, support for different gaming profiles, additional media keys & hotkeys, backlighting, and built-in USB ports. The high-end keyboard (the Razer Tarantula) has built-in memory (so your profiles and macros come with you wherever you go) and a "BattleDock" port at the top of the keyboard, which allows you to plug in accessories (though at present, the only accessory available is a light, selling at around $25). These retail from around $80 (Tarantula), $65 (Lycosa), to $55 (Microsoft Reclusa, which uses Razer technology).
- Creative offers the Fatal1ty and the Spectre (either will run you about $50). Both have a fairly standard key configuration, are compact and low-profile for convenient travel (the Fatal1ty is about the size of a laptop keyboard while the Spectre is closer to a standard keyboard size -- and when considering this remember that most of the other keyboards we're discussing are on the large size), and are backlit (the Fatal1ty has transparent keys).







Reader Comments (Page 1 of 3)
Kaphik Jan 27th 2008 6:46PM
Problem with the Z Board is the WoW Burning Crusade keyset. My 'n' stopped working, and there is no information to be found at all on their forums, nor is their customer service much help. I've seen a bunch of posts from people who have the name or a similar problem. No fix yet.
Verses Jan 27th 2008 7:05PM
Pfff... overated, no Mac support ... as of now.
Meno Jan 27th 2008 7:57PM
Forget the game keyboard. Get the Fang Gamepad by the same company. It's so much better. And I also use a Mac and had to download Controller Mate. I think it's a $15 registration, but it works with *any* USB gamepad and is probably 10x better than the ZBoard software. I think I'm going to get some a 3 button USB footpedal next...
William Jan 28th 2008 8:53AM
Ahhhh... come on! How come us mac users don't get cool products like WoW keyboards and stuff? So unfair! LOL! Then again, the Mac keyboard is pretty good as it is... And memorizing your commands isn't that hard if you are a dedicated player... and thus I digress... No WoW keyboard necessary for me... :)
h8rain Jan 28th 2008 10:51AM
I was about to buy one of those Zboard, but I did not see Mac support on the box. I looked it up and found out that it is indeed PC only. I was bummed. I really like it, and want to use it, but I don't want to have to reboot into "PC" mode, just to use the keyboard.
MAKE NATIVE OSX SUPPORT!!!!!
Mixx Jan 27th 2008 7:06PM
Sounds good in theory but the keyboard is not very good. I used it for about 3-4 months. Poor tension on the keys & it seemed pretty cheaply made to me. I felt like I overpaid and now it sits collecting dust.......
Matthew Jan 27th 2008 7:09PM
Out of curiousity, is this a paid advertorial?
Matthew Rossi Jan 27th 2008 7:49PM
Would you pay for something that points out alternatives to your product?
Calaana Jan 27th 2008 7:57PM
If the alternatives aren't as good, thus making my product look superior, yes, yes I would.
T-4 Jan 27th 2008 10:22PM
Are you seriously defending the fact that this is paid? Maybe it's not paid by money, but they offered some products for contests, and I'm guessing this is their payoff. Aside from the products being on the site originally for the contest.
Matthew Jan 27th 2008 11:01PM
NVM. I see their icon in the huge graphic for the story above this one. Guess that answers my question.
Ryan Jan 27th 2008 7:16PM
Yea, had one for about 6 months, then keys started randomly not working and I threw it out.
Roxton Jan 27th 2008 7:23PM
I take the view that if you can't cope with a normal keyboard, then you shouldn't really be playing. It's like the people who spend hundreds of pounds on weighted mice with 30k dpi ect and moulded grips, whereas the pros make do with the cheap logitech mice bought for £1.50 from amazon. I play WoW on my laptop which has a 17" screen, and thus a numpad. I find the numpad damn useful, but I think that something like this is just silly. I doubt that I can really improve your gameplay. Every single key on my keyboard is bound to something, and when I'm PvPing or intense raiding I feel like I'm typing, and it's damn satisfying. You wouldn't get that kind of feeling of l33tness from a keyboard like that.
ceckjustin Jan 27th 2008 9:48PM
It's more of a comfort and laziness type of deal rather than a "l33tness" deal. I have one, and I don't use many of the features it has. I just like the spacing of the keys etc. I also have a Logitech MX Revolution mouse. I'd rather just move my thumb to the top of the side to perform a (arcane explosion/freeze trap/vanish) rather than move the whole mouse to the button and click. More relaxed.
Roxton Jan 28th 2008 5:26AM
I see your point, but I doubt that many people have such frequently-used spells as Frost Nova without a key bound to it. I don't move my thumb to the right, I reach up and press the 5 key to frost nova. I have never clicked on a spell to cast it (except teleports and stuff like that), and this is perfectly manageable with a standard QWERTY keyboard. Extra mouse buttons, I agree, are damn useful, especially for spells you want to cast instantly - I have two extra side buttons and a mousewheel: the mousewheel is set to counterspell, the right side to Ice Lance and the left side to RLC.
Sarah Jan 28th 2008 12:56PM
Well, WoW pros might spend £1.50 on a mouse, but if they play any fps games then they buy something decent, so it depends on how much of a "gamer" you are. I have a Razer mouse, 'cos I like Counter Strike and Team Fortress 2.
I probably wouldn't buy the zboard, I'm just not convinced that it's keys are that useful tbh. I do have a Logitech G15, which is great, the macro keys are useful (I have the one with the 18 keys down the side, and during 5 mans I have different heals bound to the different groups, makes things a lot quicker), and the screen is awesome. It's great in battlegrounds, it tracks your kills/kb/deaths so you can always see them.
But then I play on a 22" widescreen Dell, 'cos I like the best possible experience. ;)
Tridus Jan 27th 2008 7:32PM
Had mine for a year now, its working pretty well.
Its sad, but these "gaming" keyboards are among the few decent wired keyboards left. Most stuff being put out now is wireless or total crap (or both).
If you've ever had your wireless keyboard's batteries die while trying to raid heal, you'll appreciate the value of a wire.
Spad Jan 27th 2008 7:36PM
Next time why not have an article comparing the merit's of different keyboards, and proclaim the advertiser the winner.
It'll be a lot less obvious.
Cllover Jan 27th 2008 7:50PM
I have had my Zboard for 3 years now...and I love it. Nothing has broken on it as of yet, and that is with 2 adults and 2 kids using it. Maybe some of you just got bunk boards...as any merchandise product will have. Hope your issues get resolved soon!
Charlie Taylor Jan 27th 2008 7:52PM
I tried one out at Fry's last week, wasn't impressed at all by the quality of the keys. One's fingers would get very tired using those spongy keys all day.