
The Horde AIMO brings a new meaning to the word extras. Its Roccat-pioneered Membranical keys represent the best of both worlds between membrane and mechanical. It also contains custom keys designed and engineered to enhance key distinction. Membranical represents the perfect compromise between membrane and mechanical. Its fast midway travel actuation point provides the most precise and responsive keystroke ever, with a fast yet silent typing feel. An island layout resists dirt for refined, low-maintenance gaming. Mid-height keys with a precision fingertip design vastly improve key distinction.
The Tuning Wheel and keys provide intuitive control for multimedia, illumination, brightness, dpi, volume, and more. You can customize it completely to suit your needs. The Tuning Wheel rotates through 360 degrees with precise, tactile steps, providing on-the-fly command power. It is also fully compatible with Windows 10 Dial functionality, making the Horde AIMO the first keyboard with this feature.
AIMO is the vivid illumination eco-system from Roccat. Its functionality grows exponentially based on the number of AIMO-enabled devices connected. It reacts organically to your computing behaviour, providing a completely fluid, next-gen experience. AIMO eliminates the need for configuration and presents state-of-the-art lighting right out of the box. Five macro keys are perfectly placed next to the main key zone for rapid and intuitive execution. The lower height makes it easy to identify the keys with your fingers and prevents accidental miss-hits.
Macros are actuated even faster than the main keys, for quick-fire control. Roccat engineers developed an advanced algorithm that improves the key-mapping technology. It provides an anti-ghosting solution like none before it. Now you can press as many keys as you want in the gaming key area and every single keystroke will be registered. No matter how many actions you can perform per minute, the Horde AIMO can keep up.
The stats we're presenting here are based purely on our staff, who make up a tiny percentage of the general population, but they tell us that 100% of our staff that ordered something online exhibited signs of excitement when that thing was delivered.
We know the saying "Money can't buy happiness", but you don't often see someone crying on a jetski - and not just because all that water splashing around would make it hard to identify the tears in the first place.
Although we do have to ask: if our savings are this good, shouldn't we be calling it discount therapy instead?