Corsair K55 CORE RGB Membrane Wired Gaming Keyboard – Quiet, Responsive Switches – Spill Resistance – Ten-Zone RGB – Media Keys – iCUE Compatible – QWERTY NA – PC, Mac – Black
$39.99
Price: $39.99
(as of Dec 26, 2024 08:02:04 UTC – Details)
The CORSAIR K55 CORE gaming keyboard puts you on the winning path. Brighten your gaming sessions with fully customizable ten-zone RGB backlighting, programmable in CORSAIR iCUE, to create your own personal light show as you rack up a string of wins. Quiet, responsive membrane switches mean you can type, chat, and play in any setting. Take control with four dedicated media buttons, so you never have to pause the action to adjust volume and playback, while 300ml spill resistance keeps spills from ruining your most exciting moments. With the K55 CORE, you have everything you need to start your winning streak.
Your Winning Streak Starts Now: Everything you need to start your winning streak is here. Enjoy quiet, responsive keypresses and RGB that makes your gaming sessions shine.
Ten-Zone RGB Backlighting: Ten zones of fully customizable RGB illuminate your desktop with mesmerizing lighting effects.
Convenient Media Controls: Four dedicated media buttons give you the ability to control volume and playback with ease, and Win lock and brightness buttons put extra commands at your fingertips.
300ml Spill Resistance: K55 CORE withstands drink spills, so you can play without worrying about real-life water attacks.
12-Key Rollover with 1,000Hz Polling: Make sure your keyboard keeps up with your best plays and most complex actions without delay.
Customers say
Customers find this gaming keyboard offers good value for the price. They appreciate the responsive keys and smooth typing experience. The lighting features are also appreciated, with backlighting providing a satisfying illumination. Overall, customers find it to be a comfortable and functional keyboard that gets the job done.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
7 reviews for Corsair K55 CORE RGB Membrane Wired Gaming Keyboard – Quiet, Responsive Switches – Spill Resistance – Ten-Zone RGB – Media Keys – iCUE Compatible – QWERTY NA – PC, Mac – Black
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$39.99
Art the Science Guy –
4 ILLUMINATED KEYBOARDS RATED – This one is the best of the the four!
My favorite, most used keyboard in my office is my Das 4 Professional Soft Tactile MX Brown Mechanical Keyboard. I mention this so that you could have an idea as to what I look for in a keyboard. Although Das does make an illuminated keyboard, Das Keyboard Prime 13 White LED Backlit, at $129.00 itâs a bit too steep for most of us. I wanted an illuminated keyboard for home use so I could use it at night without disturbing anyone by having to keep the overhead lights on.I ended up buying 4 keyboards looking for the one that not only had good backlighting but also good typing action making it easy to see at night and easy to type on. I wanted to keep the price to around $50.00 â so here is what I bought in order:Perixx PX-1100 ($59.99)The keyboard has serious flaws that significantly interfere with it’s stated purpose. It is supposed to be illuminated so that it could be used in a dark room. It specifically states that it has key and letter illumination which it does but here lies the problem – the illumination is very uneven with some keys being very bright and others just an inch or two away being very dim. As an example, the left arrow key on my keyboard was very bright while the right arrow key was barely visible especially since the keys next to it were so bright! Another factor is the brightness surrounding the keys which in some areas is brighter than the keys themselves which makes it more difficult to read them. This keyboard apparently has “zone illumination” meaning that it has just a few LED’s lighting up the keys and in some places, near the edge of the zones, there are dim areas – very dim areas, even with the brightness at maximum. If you’re buying this for the illumination to make it easier to read in a dark room, look elsewhere. If you want a cool looking, colorful keyboard that has relatively good good typing action this is your keyboard, it is heavy, well built, has good typing action and poor lighting. This was the first one I bought and I was very disappointed with it, hence the mediocre rating.Azio â Vision Large Font Keyboard ($29.99)This keyboard has large font: letters, numbers and symbols making it very easy to read in a darkened room. The lighting is even throughout the entire keyboard, there are no bright or dark areas and you can easily change the color of the keys for the entire keyboard or within the 5 lighting zones. For people with vision impairments, this is your keyboard. It is easy to use, set-up and change colors. The typing action on it is very unsatisfying for me as the keys are larger than standard keys so my fingers are not used to the spacing. Also, the height of the keys is somewhat shallower than standard keys and the resistance when you type is âmushyâ at least for me. That said, for visually impaired people who are used to the common $15 to $20 keyboard this will be fine for you and at $30, it is a bargain.Logitech K740 â Fullsize Illuminated Slim Keyboard ($59.99)This keyboard is very slim in fact, the travel of the keys when you type is minimal and they are very shallow which I am not used to so I found typing on it unsatisfying. The keyboard reminds me of the one on my inexpensive, compact laptop which gets the job done when Iâm traveling but is not designed for serious typing. The illumination however is excellent, bright white and very legible. Set-up is simple and adjusting the brightness is straight forward. If my âgo-toâ keyboard wasnât so good, I probably wouldnât have an issue with this one. Once you have typed on a quality keyboard with mechanical switches you get spoiled! At $60 on sale, I was underwhelmed.Corsair K55 Gaming Keyboard ($47.99)This keyboard basically met my expectations for typing feedback and illumination for the price but itâs far from perfect. When you first connect it to your computer you will be met with an over the top moving display of colors flowing across the entire keyboard which is very distracting and thankfully easily changed with just a few key strokes. You can make it all one color if you wish and choose the color you want or make each zone a different color. The keyboard is light weight like most cheap keyboards, lighter even than the non-illuminated Dell keyboard that it replaced but it gets the job done. The first thing I noticed is that the illumination is crisp and even throughout the keyboard. The letters and symbols are centered on the keys and a bit bolder in font than average keyboards. The keys are not individually illuminated but there are enough LEDâs to give it an even appearance. The lighting around the keys is somewhat bright but not to the point of making them difficult to read as on the Perixx. Although the keys themselves are not mechanical, they feel somewhat mechanical giving it a nice tactile experience. The keys have the same height as one would find on a good standard keyboard and have about the same travel as well, so it is a good keyboard to type on or use for gaming or both!There are many illuminated keyboards out there and I spent hours shopping on Amazon and reading reviews trying to finds one that would be right for me. For some people, the typing action may be secondary and so for them, the best buy would be the Azio Vision Large Font Keyboard which at $29.99 is a bargain. It is the easiest by far to read under any conditions and very easy to use/set-up. The Logitech at $60 is also very easy to read but it is twice the price of the Azio. That said, the keys are standard size and it is very well made. For me, the Corsair K55 was the best compromise; although the Azio and the Logitech are easier to read, the Corsair is also easy to read, they are just a bit better in visibility but when I considered typing feel and speed , the Corsair wins.I hope this helps some of you make the right buying decision.Art
jesse –
good budget keyboard
it’s good enough. is this going to feel like you got a top tier keyboard on the cheap? no. but for 40 bucks it’s probably the best you can do if you want the features this offers. my other, older corsair keyboards are definitely better quality but one is the k63 lapdesk model and the other one was the old silver metal k100. i sold that one a long time ago and while i save up for the new model i decided to give this a try and use my lapdesk model as a lapdesk again for the couch rig. the keys on this feel way more generic, has the old school membrane feel to it. it is quiet, not silent. keys are snappy enough. it’s fine for gaming. lets be real you don’t react in milliseconds anyways. the cord is long enough. the rgb works well, it is zone based though and the zones are kind of strange. it would make more sense to me to use zones for the f keys, number keys, numpad, arrow keys, something like that. this just haphazardly divides the lighting in random vertical swatches across the keyboard. i don’t care because i use solid color anyways. onboard memory means once you set up the light how you want, you can close icue and not have it eating up your ram so that’s nice. the media keys work fine, i have had both the volume rocker style on my t100 and the regular control keys on the k63 and it looks to me like the design of the media keys on this is just to save space. it is a small keyboard, no frills. retains the 10keys while still being reasonably compact. it’s nice because it saves desk space but isn’t one of these new age tiny 10keyless keyboards. that said i feel like the keys are a little smaller than my k63 but i would have to measure it and i’m not going to. it doesn’t affect typing. this one has a lot of different lighting level options on the keyboard itself to have the LEDs as bright or dim as you want. that’s kind of nice, my k63 only has bright, medium, and off. windows lock key does the job. water resistance is nice. seems like it will be a good keyboard and would be a good full size option for someone who needs something to take around with them but not have to worry about breaking it.tl;dr i really doubt you’ll do better than this for 40 bucks.
ChocoPike –
Robuste et très beau ! J’adore tu peux jouer avec le son de ton casque sur le clavier.
ManojMaximum –
Works perfectly fine for Windows Machine
Grzegorz Swirski –
High recomended. Thx a lot.
Sps –
I’ve been using the CORSAIR K55 Core RGB Wired Gaming Keyboard for a few days now, and I am very satisfied. The keyboard not only looks amazing but also feels fantastic to type on. The keys have a satisfying response and the overall build quality feels solid.
smousme –
Commandé une première fois.. le clavier s’est “perdu” en route…. après appel au service client, commande renvoyée…. et… la deuxième fois, le clavier est bien arrivé mais sans aucun emballage à part la boîte d’origine (avec en prime aucun scellés … et un clavier semblant avoir déjà été ouvert…).Sinon, le clavier est qualitatif et facile à configurer avec le logiciel icue de corsair. Même si j’ai du attendre 2 semaines (avec livraison prime…en retard sans aucune compensation et la nécessité de passer par le service client…), je suis content de mon achat.