Quote from: kony on May 11, 2021, 10:23:44
I wish there was a company that *improves* keyboards in their laptops, instead everybody are cutting costs on it, even Lenovo...
I miss 7 row keyboards on Thinkpads...
Gaming laptop OEMs are always coming up with different variations of "mechanical keyboard" switches. Gigabyte has one with Aorus, Dell with Alienware, Asus with Scar, MSI with GT series and Acer probably has one too, I can't remember which. Aorus 15 is really good from what I remember. The rest are probably good too, considering they are selling points on the marketing material.
For regular gaming laptops with non-mechanical switches, Asus ROG is the best imo.
Other than that, Surface Book has a great long-travel keyboard last I checked. HP flagships (Spectre, Elte, ZBook) have mastered the great short-travel design, like pre-2015 MacBooks. I've personally used many HPs because I liked their more recent switches.
Lenovo and Asus (consumer lines) are quite good as well, but they're highly inconsistent by model, and within the same model as well. Dell tries to experiment a lot with XPS and Inspirons, which results in some being good and many others much worse. Dell business is good, but not better than Lenovo and HP.
The key issue is typing is highly subjective. Some people prefer clicky short travel, others springy long travel, etc etc. On top of that, everyone's trying to make their devices slimmer these days, a conflict of interest between engineers, designers, and us consumers.
IMHO, Lenovo Thinkpads are STILL the best and most consistent Brand, if you prefer longer travel on a non-gaming laptop. Of course I'm talking about the current gen X, T, P series, minus the X1s given the recent negative NBC and Youtube reviews of those. Just beware that the XTP series are prone to some degree of keyboard lottery.
(Keep in mind, all of my impressions are only relevant to the mid-range and high-end brands, not any budget laptops)