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Home » Reviews » CM Storm QuickFire Rapid Mechanical Keyboard
Reviews

CM Storm QuickFire Rapid Mechanical Keyboard

BossMac SubaBy BossMac SubaDecember 23, 201110 Comments7 Mins Read
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Mechanical keyboards are slowly taking over the top spot of the keyboard game with more and more gamers’ preferring to choose a better typing experience than flare and flashy features (ehem Logitech ehem). With its recent entry in the gaming peripheral scene, its not surprising that CM Storm would want to establish itself quickly and they have done fairly well so far with their casing and mice line up. They’ve recently released their first venture into the keyboard market with the QuickFire Rapid, a compact mechanical keyboard that ditches features for feel. Does CM Storm have something worth having here or is the quickfire more of a spray and pray? Let’s see and as usual, let’s maked this showy!

CM Storm is a subsidiary of Coolermaster that focuses on the gaming scene. A while back, CM Storm was but a sub-genre of casings with the Scout and Stealth being so successful products. Coolermaster is looking to extend to this success by expanding its CM Storm franchise. We’ve recently seen one of their products, the Spawn mice, and we came out satisfied but CM Storm isn’t stopping there and their first venture into the keyboard market, they immediately go after some high-end appeal with the QuickFire Rapid: a mechanical keyboard intended for gamers.

PACKAGING

 [singlepic id=4236 w=280h=200 float=center] [singlepic id=4237 w=280h=200 float=center]
[singlepic id=4238 w=280h=200 float=center] [singlepic id=4239 w=280h=200 float=center]

The QuickFire Rapid package includes a manual, replacement keycaps, a keypuller, a USB cable and USB-to-PS/2 adaptor. Pretty bare-bones right there but so are other mechanical keyboards.

CLOSER LOOK

[singlepic id=4240 w=280h=200 float=center]At first look, the QuickFire Rapid is one very small keyboard. The layout is pretty much standard minus the number pad. [singlepic id=4241 w=280h=200 float=center]Undearneath the keyboard we have rubber feet to stop the keyboard from moving around. This is supported in turn by the heft of the keyboard itself which is pretty weighty for its size. We also see 2 adjustable feet to increase the height of our QuickFire.
[singlepic id=4242 w=280h=200 float=center]One thing that struck me immediately with the detachable USB cable of the Quickfire Rapid is that its braided and of very high quality which contrasts the vanilla rubber cable of the Spawn mouse we recently reviewed. Nice touch here. [singlepic id=4244 w=280h=200 float=center]Another improvement over its other product is the gold-plating in the USB connectors. The plating is much more noticeable and has an elegant shine to it giving it that extra swagger.
[singlepic id=4245 w=280h=200 float=center]Keycap replacements for the WASD and Windows keys are included as well as a key puller. [singlepic id=4247 w=280h=200 float=center]Notice how they named the space bar QuickFire. That is misleading right there because that button is usually the jump button on most FPS. Kidding aside, the layout has an upward slant which is reminiscent of the BlackWidow from Razer.
[singlepic id=4246 w=280h=200 float=center]Here we can see the rise the adjustable feet gives us. It doesn’t add much height to it but gives just the right slant for those wider tables. [singlepic id=4249 w=280h=200 float=center]The bottom also gives us 3 paths for the cables to run through so the cable can go either left or right or just straight up without snaking around the bottom.

PERFORMANCE, COMFORT, FUNCTIONALITY

I’ll be very honest, I like mechanical keyboards. And so will you once you use one. One thing that’s not really to everyone’s liking is the sound they make. CM Storm offers multiple variants of the QuickFire Rapid featuring the famed Cherry MX switches and its blue, red and black offerings. The one we have here features the Cherry MX Blue switches, again similar to the BlackWidow. Do check the model code and front cover which has a sticker of which model you’re getting.

So on to performance, we have a nicely laid out keyboard here minus a number pad. Having been used to Cherry MX Blues, I can say right off the bat that the feel of the QuickFire Rapid is still the same though at close observation, the keys feels a bit heavier to press than on the BlackWidow and since the keys are uncoated has a normal feel to their texture. Barring all those, you still get a high performing typing experience that is very solid and highly responsive.

For comfort, we’ve already mentioned how good it feels to use a mechanical keyboard but the sound is just a hit or miss to everyone. The layout is very standard so it feels just like any other keyboard but with its dark gunship grey coloring and black keys it looks like any old keyboard also. It won’t win any style award with this look. Putting the Caps/Num/Scr Lock lights on the keys themselves is pretty much been adopted by laptops for a while now and though it might seem sensible most users will most likely never notice it so making them highly illuminated should’ve been skimped out in favor of more discrete lights since they kind of make you want to ask for individual key lighting. No hand rest included but that’s understandable given the QuickFire’s placement in the market.

Functionality and features though you won’t get much from the QuickFire Rapid. No macro functionality, USB and audio passthroughs, no key lights, no nothing. This is as straight and real as it gets. Such is the sad reality of mechanical keyboards. We do expect more from manufacturers in the future though. Right now, you only get media keys in the QuickFire.

CONCLUSION

So does CM Storm’s first keyboard make it a stand-out competitor or just another kid on the block?

You’re getting a solid keyboard at a fraction of the size of other offerings but considering the market that this kind of keyboard targets, rarely do you see users opting for compact and discrete. Flashy is the name of the game and looks will always count for you.

[singlepic id=4248 w=480h=320 float=center]

Performance and feel was straight up and no nonsense. It delivered well as a mechanical keyboard but I really gotta stress the importance of the number pad here. When Razer decided to chop off the number pad on the marauder, they had the decency to at least compress it to the navigation keys. With CM Storm, they decided to just do away with it. A mechanical keyboard isn’t all about the WASD key, its still a keyboard and is by all means will be used as one. We can understand that they had to make sacrifices to lessen the cost but at the cost of a core functionality it has become a dire flaw.

So in closing, it boils down to price. There is no news yet of how much the QuickFire is locally but we can see online prices hover around USD100. That is USD20 more than a Razer BlackWidow, a Rosewill, TtEsport Meka or a Das keyboard. Those keyboards feature full layout keys and are more established in the game. So why would you still buy the QuickFire? Well if you’re looking for a compact mechanical keyboard to carry around, you won’t get anything more compact than the QuickFire Rapid. We’re seriously convinced that the QuickFire Rapid is a good mechanical keyboard but its identity crisis of being a compact offering versus a gaming product is hurting its true purpose.

EDIT 2/17/2012: The QuickFire Rapid is now locally available for around Php3,300 making it compete against the Tt eSports Meka who is at the same price point. This reviewer feels the good price brings the CM Storm Quickfire Rapid to a more comfortable zone for gamers especially the ones who prefer portable or compact keyboards. This is still the most compact mechanical keyboard out there.


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BossMac Suba
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Boss Mac Suba is the driving force behind Back2Gaming.com, a leading authority in PC gaming hardware and video game reviews. With over a decade of experience in IT and more in doing reviews for things he love, he combines in-depth technical expertise with a no-nonsense approach to deliver data-driven, insightful content. If we've ever been in a media briefing together before, you know I'm the guy that asks the good questions. Favorite quote: My favorite animal is the scapegoat.

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10 Comments

  1. Chad Ting Ramos on December 24, 2011 9:08 pm

    naisu

    Reply
  2. Rm Bulanon on January 18, 2012 1:25 pm

    I think this review got the whole point of a 10-key-less keyboard wrong.

    Reply
    • Boss Mac on January 18, 2012 3:18 pm

      I’d love to know what that point is.

      Reply
    • Haoson on January 18, 2012 3:23 pm

      …still waiting *looks at watch*

      Reply
  3. daniel0731ex on February 12, 2012 1:01 pm

    Point of Tenkeyless:

    1. numpad gets in the way of the mouse
    2. some people who touch-type prefer the number row, thus finding the numpad useless
    3. some people prefer the keyboard’s look without numpad
    4. better portability
    5. some people preferto use a seperae numpad on the left

    Reply
    • Boss Mac on February 13, 2012 9:44 am

      Thanks for the input, man. But as you’ve mention, it’s really all about personal preference and I believe CM Storm missed out on the fact that they really have something impressive here, but not highlighting that fact (Quickfire being portable) they failed to address that group of people that prefer to go portable by not mentioning it outright. 

      Reply
      • g_em on May 14, 2012 1:13 pm

        It would break the naming of the products if all portable gadgets/peripherals have “portable” in its name…

        cellphone = portable phone?
        thumb drive = portable drive?
        watch = portable clock?

        would you want it to be like that?

        And i thought right away that this was portable because of the RAPID in its name.

        this is a tenkeyless keyboard, why would you want a numpad? 
        I agree with daniel and Rm Bulanon here. especially when daniel mentioned the 1st point of TKL. 

        “ they failed to address that group of people that prefer to go portable by not mentioning it outright.”
        -that is why people include images of the products they review right? and that is what you did here.
        -the fact that a person would want a mechanical keyboard would imply that they already have an idea of the nature of mechanical keyboards (TKL’s, switches etc.).

        “It delivered well as a mechanical keyboard but I really gotta stress the importance of the number pad here.” 
        -That is why they made the Quick Fire Pro.

        Reply
        • Boss Mac on May 14, 2012 3:31 pm

          ^This.

          Reply
  4. emrico on March 22, 2012 8:00 am

    This will be my next keyboard for certain.
    I bought a Razer Tron simply because I could remove the numpad for better ergonomics.
    This is a better option.

    Reply
    • Boss Mac on March 22, 2012 9:48 am

      Which version Quickfire you getting? The cherry mx blues I’m personally a fan of.

      Reply
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