The 8bitdo keyboard has been pretty well-received as a ~$100 wireless keyboard with ABS keycaps. I love the way this C64 color scheme looks.
I have an 8bitdo arcade stick, which looks like it uses the same knob as this keyboard for selecting the wireless mode. I love the way it feels every time I turn it on.
Unfortunately, the keyboard doesn’t use QMK – it uses their own mapping software, which is Windows only. This makes it a non-starter for me, since I rarely use a Windows computer these days. But I just might have to copy that color scheme for my next build.
No PETSCII?!
Geez, no authenticity from these guys. Hard pass!
Although, if it did support QMK, I bet you could recreate PETSCII. I’m pretty sure QMK lets you bind a key to any unicode character, and I’m assuming all of the PETSCII characters have a unicode equivalent.
Windows only… Does this mean the maps created won’t work on Linux boxes? If I create the map on my windows burner, can I then use those maps on other, non-win devices?
Edit: I contacted support. To manage and create new maps, you need windows. However, those maps are then stored on the keyboard, and will work with any system (granted it supports kb entry, of course).
Oh nice, that’s good to know. I wonder if it’s possible to run their remapping program in a Windows virtual machine. If it works, it still wouldn’t be convenient, but you wouldn’t have to do it often, either.
Shoot, I’d take that over booting up my burner for this. It would be cool if it worked inside Wine at least. Actually, if we’re doing drathers, I’d rather it be native to Linux (even as an appimage or snap).
I wonder how the keycaps will compare to SA Retro.