Skip to main content

Logitech G19 Review

Logitech G19
“The LCD that surely accounts for a big piece of its heavenly price tag just isn”
Pros
  • Programmable G-keys; customizable backlighting; integrated media-player controls; two powered USB ports
Cons
  • LCD isn't all that useful; mushy keyboard action; expensive

Summary

Gamers form highly personal attachments to their keyboards and mice, because finding the perfect peripheral can favorably impact the ratio between triumphant victories and humiliating defeats. After all, if you’re dropping several grand on a new gaming PC, or even several hundred to upgrade the one you have, doesn’t it make sense to also buy an accessory that can give you an edge on the latest interactive blockbuster?

However, for discerning players, we’re not sure Logitech’s G19 is the right choice when it comes to cutting-edge keyboards. The device comes loaded with features, including an integrated color LCD that must account for a big chunk of its (gulp!) $200 price tag. But that fancy display doesn’t amount to much more than conspicuous bling. In addition, we’ve also pounded many a board that felt a lot better under our mitts than this one, and sell for a fraction of the price.

Design

In our opinion, it doesn’t matter how much—or how little—a keyboard costs if it doesn’t feel solid under our fingertips, and the G19’s keys come across as though they’re floating on a bowl of mashed potatoes. There’s enough resistance that we never accidentally activated a key by simply resting our fingers on the keyboard, but applying only moderate pressure to its midsection caused the entire device to flex.

Logitech added a number of new keys while increasing the G19’s dimensions only slightly. It’s about 1.5 inches wider and 1.75 inches deeper (the LCD juts out from the top) than the typical keyboard. Snapping on the detachable wrist rest adds another three inches to the keyboard’s depth—it’s the G19’s designers’ token nod to ergonomics. You can elevate the top of the keyboard by flipping out a pair peg legs, but the keys themselves are straight as an arrow and flat as a pancake. Some gamers prefer this type of design; others prefer a split down the middle that allows their wrists to rest at a more natural angle.

Logitech G19 Keyboard

Logitech G19 Keyboard

Logitech wisely didn’t mess with the traditional layout while adding their new keys though. Your fingers will find the Function keys where they expect them to be; the Insert, Home, Delete, End, Page-up and Page-down keys are in their usual two-row block; and the arrow keys are in their familiar inverted “T.” The Enter, Backspace, Shift, and Caps Lock keys are appropriately oversized as well, and there’s a numeric keypad on the right-hand side to boot.

Features

Logitech added a second set of 12 function keys—labeled G1 through G12—on the left-hand side of the keyboard, however. Each of these keys can be programmed with three custom macros, so that one key press can send a sequence of up to 36 key press signals to the computer. Custom macros can be recorded on the fly, or you can use the provided PC software to assign keystrokes, macros, scripts, or functions (Calculator, Web browser, Email, etc.) to each G-key. You can then save these configurations as profiles that are automatically loaded when an application starts (or that remain persistent no matter what app is running).

Logitech G19 Keyboard

Logitech G19 Keyboard

Logitech has also created specialized profiles for more than 60 games—including Command & Conquer 3, Crysis, Fallout 3, World of Warcraft, and World in Conflict—that consist of pre-recorded macros that can be assigned to any of the G-keys. If you’re playing Crysis, for instance, you can move your left hand a short distance to activate your night vision, switch from a vehicle’s gunner seat to its driver seat, or perform any of the game’s 45 other actions. We found that we were able to perform these actions much faster with the G19 than we could with a traditional keyboard where the commands are assigned to letter keys all over the keyboard. And we never had to take our right hand off our mouse (southpaws might have a different experience).

The keyboard’s keys can be backlit with three color choices—green, blue, and violet—available at a button press. If you don’t like any of these shades, you can create your own from a seemingly infinite palette. Oddly enough, you can’t turn off the LCD without also turning off the key backlighting.

The LCD

The novelty of having a display integrated into your keyboard wears off quickly. The tiltable LCD is bright, crisp, colorful, and delivers good resolution for its size (320×240 pixels). Logitech has created a number of applications for it, but none that wouldn’t work better on the much larger screen that’s right in front of you.

The clock/calendar, stopwatch, and CPU utilization monitor are moderately useful, but the YouTube client, photo and video viewers, POP3 monitor, and RSS feed programs amount to a lot of flash and very little substance. And as you’ve probably guessed, the LCD draws more power than any USB port can provide, so the keyboard comes with its own supplemental power supply. This slim wall wart didn’t consume more than its allotted space on our surge suppressor, but it didn’t provide enough juice to the keyboard’s two USB hubs to power our admittedly piggish 250GB Western Digital Passport portable hard drive, either.

Logitech G19 Keyboard

Logitech G19 Keyboard

Other Features and Conclusion

Gamers have cursed the Windows menu key ever since it was introduced—way back when Duke Nukem 3D was everyone’s favorite first-person shooter. The G19 has a handy switch that disables it so your gaming won’t be interrupted if you tap it while reaching for something else. We also like the built-in transport controls for Window Media Player, the barrel-shaped volume-control wheel, and the handy mute button (that’s something that should be on every keyboard!)

Not everyone will find the G19’s mushy key action as distasteful as we did, so we can’t let that weigh too heavily in our bottom-line opinion. The price/performance ratio, on the other hand, is just way out of whack. As much as we like this keyboard’s gaming-oriented features, the LCD just doesn’t add enough value to justify the exorbitant price tag.

Logitech G19 Keyboard Pros:

  • Highly programmable
  • Backlit
  • Integrated media-player controls
  • Kill switch for the Windows menu key

Cons:

  • Turning the display off also turns off the keyboard backlighting
  • Mushy tactile feedback
  • Expensive
Michael Brown
Former Digital Trends Contributor
OnePlus Nord CE 2 5G has 65W charging, coming on February 17
oneplus nord ce 2 5g release date news camera teaser

The OnePlus Nord CE 2 5G will get its official unveiling on February 17, and the company has circulated a teaser showing the rear camera module to build anticipation, plus it has revealed a few key facts from the spec sheet. The Nord CE 2 5G is the sequel to the Nord CE, released in June 2021, which provided great mid-range device value.

What about the Nord CE 2 5G? The teaser image shows a very different camera module to the first Nord CE. This time it’s a rectangular shape and houses two cameras and two smaller apertures, potentially for another camera and a flash, or a flash and an additional sensor for focusing. The Nord CE had three cameras -- a 64-megapixel main, an 8MP wide-angle, and a 2MP monochrome camera.

Read more
NASA and SpaceX reviewing parachute issue on Dragon spacecraft
Crew Dragon Endeavour shortly before splashdown.

SpaceX's Dragon spacecraft have been greatly successful in their NASA missions, in the form of both the Crew Dragon capsules which carry astronauts to and from the International Space Station (ISS), and the Cargo Dragon supply crafts which carry equipment, research, and supplies to the ISS as well. But this week NASA and SpaceX announced they are investigating an issue with the parachute opening during recent Dragon splashdowns, although the problem doesn't seem to be a serious or dangerous one.

Dragon craft use parachutes to slow their descent through Earth's atmosphere before they land in the ocean. But during a resupply mission splashing down on January 24, 2022, one of the four parachutes was delayed in opening. This is the second time a parachute opening has been delayed, following a similar issue that occurred to a Crew Dragon craft last year.

Read more
These new chips could be good news for Copilot+ PCs
The Qualcomm Snapdragon X Plus

The first Copilot+ laptops are already out, powered by Qualcomm's impressive new Snapdragon X chip. The first batch of reviews were delayed, and early impressions have observed the hits and misses of the current chips. But a new leak tells us that Qualcomm might have another ace up its sleeve, and there may be hope for these Arm-based Copilot+ PCs yet. What's new? There might be more models of the chip than what we've been privy to so far.

So far, we've seen reviews of the Asus Vivobook S 15, but that's just one of several chips that fall under the Snapdragon X Elite umbrella. According to files for the Adreno GPU driver, there may be not just six, but 10 different models of the Snapdragon X -- and three of those are Plus chips, which we've previously only seen one of.

Read more