Experience the ultimate in comfort and efficiency with the PERIBOARD-535 Full-Size Ergonomic Keyboard. Designed with a split-key layout and a curved frame, this keyboard promotes better posture by aligning your wrists and arms in a natural typing position, reducing the risk of strain during long work sessions.
Equipped with brown tactile mechanical switches, the keyboard ensures you receive excellent key-press feedback while minimizing loud clicks, making it perfect for heavy coding or typing tasks. You can focus on your work without distractions, thanks to the satisfying yet subtle auditory response of the keys.
The PERIBOARD-535 features an adjustable tilt wrist rest with three angle settings: 0, -4, and -7 degrees, supporting your palm and wrist to promote proper wrist alignment and prevent discomfort from extended usage. This thoughtful design helps alleviate pressure and muscle strain, allowing you to type for hours with ease.
Customization is at your fingertips with programmable keys and intuitive software that let you rearrange key functions, assign custom actions, and create up to four macros. This flexibility optimizes your workflow and simplifies repetitive tasks, making productivity easier than ever. Additionally, dedicated Win and Mac keys allow for quick switching between operating systems.
Compatible with Windows 7, 8, 10, and 11, Linux, and Mac OS X, the PERIBOARD-535 is designed to work seamlessly with multiple platforms. The durable 5.9-foot USB cable ensures you have ample reach for your setup, while its compact dimensions of 18.66 x 7.95 x 1.73 inches and weight of 2.97 pounds make it suitable for any workspace.
Elevate your typing experience and take control of your productivity with the PERIBOARD-535 Ergonomic Keyboard—where comfort meets functionality.
Dane –
The folks responsible for putting the “legs”/flaps at the bottom is a genius. I’ve been shopping through ergo keyboards ever since I picked up the MS ergo keyboard several years ago and this has been the best implementation to date. For anyone that has an angled typing style, you can’t beat this. I use the full 7 degree angle and I can feel the IMMEDIATE RELIEF in my wrists after using any other keyboard. It’s just nice to be able to rest the full weight of that area and type freely. It feels the most natural and it makes it very apparent to me that I’ve been “floating” my arms for countless years.
The main cons for this keyboard are the proprietary switches. Even for browns, these do not feel as satisfying as what you’d normally get out of the box from a das or keychron board (I’m not deep enough to know much about customs). I think this design choice was made in order to maintain the shape as Alice/Arisu keyboards tend to angle their keys inwards and be really bulky/heavy with no legs whatsoever. Still ergonomic but not as comfortable as the Perixx.
Overall if you need to type for long hours and comfort is key then give this board a try.
Carlos BISTAFA –
I have been using this keyboard for about a month. It is both my first mechanical keyboard and my first ergonomic keyboard. I went for the brown switches, as their features seem to be a perfect middle-ground between blue and red switches. As I have been using flat keyboards all my life, it took me 2 or 3 days to get use to the shape, but it is indeed much more comfortable and has contribute to decrease the pain on my right hand. I have only one regret: not getting this keyboard before! It is worthy of every penny.
M.A. –
The wrist/elbow alignment stays at a much more natural angle, and this is the first keyboard I’ve found that angles DOWN with the feet extended. I don’t understand why the standard is to angle the keyboard UP and make your wrists angled back to increase carpal tunnel. So this keyboard is a good step in the right direction. I just think that it should be angled down a bit further and better support for the wrists should be included (the included tab is pretty good, but would need something wider and with its own support feet in the corners).
The key presses are very nice and I can type faster on this keyboard than on my regular keyboard. The thing that I don’t like is the “function” key, I wish it wasn’t there.
EstusPete –
This keyboard combines all the elegance of a gaming keyboard with the ergonomics of, well, an ergonomic keyboard. The Cloud 9 keyboard was the first mechanical ergonomic board I’ve owned, but I think this one is better in many ways: 1) it is a smaller form factor and takes up much less desk space; 2) the low-profile switches make typing a breeze and with less effort; 3) the classic layout doesn’t try to do anything “cute,” so I do not have to get used to a different location of, for example, the delete, home, end, page up, page down, etc. keys; and 4) the price is very reasonable compared to competitors of similar products. There are probably other reasons I am forgetting to mention, but I wholeheartedly encourage anyone who is looking for an ergonomic keyboard to start using this one. If you’ve never used mechanical switches before, you’ve been missing out. I like the blue/clicky switches, but they’re not for everyone. The brown (tactile) or red (straight) switches may be to your preference. Either way, they add a lot of pleasure to the typing experience. And in a world where many spend half of their waking life in front of a computer, you should have nothing but the best.
Carlos BISTAFA –
The keyboard is very nice and has a high comfort level. But after a little over a month the riser tab snapped off while I was typing normally. I am not able to contact the seller through Amazon for support so I had to put a book under the keyboard to get it to raise up. Inconvenient but adapt and over come…
Amazon Customer –
The keyboard is fantastic. Especially at the price point. I got the red switches as I had never used a red switch before. Stick to blues! The keyboard deck doesn’t have much flex. I’ve used several Perixx ergo membrane keyboards before hand. So the big change is the mechanical switches. It feels premium and a nice upgrade to my previous Perixx keyboard.
Red-Eyed Zhaan –
My previous keyboard was a similar ergonomic design, but with basic non-mechanical switches, and the difference is night and day. The keys on my other one felt slow/squishy, whereas these are super responsive, allowing me to type much faster with a very light touch. I also love the sound. I was concerned it would be too loud, so I got the red switches, and they are exactly what I wanted – still with the satisfying clack of a mechanical keyboard, but won’t wake anyone up in the next room.
I was choosing between this one and another model that did not have the 10-key number pad, and this won because I wasn’t willing to go without that. I haven’t used all the features yet, but the Macro keys have already come in handy – very nice to have. Size wise, this also fits my adjustable keyboard tray – other ergonomic models were so wide that they would have been spilling over the sides.
The interface software is so easy to use – I always disable the left-side Windows key so I don’t accidentally hit it and interrupt my gaming session, and with previous keyboards I always had to go into the Registry Editor and modify hex codes, but for this one you can do it with a simple click on the mapping profile through the software.
The only thing that would have been nice to have is a bit of lighting on the keys for when the room is dark, but that’s not a big deal, and otherwise I have no notes.
msalley –
Leaving a first-day review since I just switched over to this keyboard from a Microsoft Natural 4000 v1.0 and I will try to update after a month or so with any new impressions but I wanted to catch the first day thoughts before I get too acclimated.
The positive: I got the blue switches, and I don’t find them annoyingly loud or problematic. I couldn’t decide between blue and brown and I may still try a brown someday just for fun, but the blue is completely satisfactory and not as dramatically annoying as some people make it sound. The keys bottoming out on the board make more noise than the extra “click” of the blue mechanism and that would be a constant across any keyboard. It’s more or less comfortable to use, and I haven’t had any serious issues with muscle memory causing me to hit wrong keys. There have been a few extra instances where I tended to type letters backwards; i.e. “em” instead of “me” or “todya” instead of “today” but I think that will sort itself out with more practice. I did not think I would like the low profile keys AT ALL – I am used to full-travel keys and prefer them and intensely dislike “chiclet” keys… but this doesn’t feel like chiclets. They do have a shorter travel than I remember from before, but it isn’t unpleasant to use at all from that regard. Wanting full profile instead of low profile keys was my biggest hangup buying this sight-unseen and after using it, I now would tell other prospective buyers not to let that fear stop them; it’s not an issue.
Other good things: I haven’t had any issues at all with imprecision, unreliability, or anything else like that… every switch feels the same to me and works reliably. I’ve been using the keyboard for my work all day and haven’t really even been conscious of having swapped them around, which is a good thing.
The build quality feels decent to me so far. It doesn’t give the impression of being overly cheap.
Now the negatives.
First, the implementation of the function keys, function lock, and win/mac switches is absolutely cryptic and there is no help in the manual or their web site to explain how it is all supposed to work. The manual talks about switching the keyboard from Windows to Mac mode but doesn’t explain anything at all about what is different from one to the other. In addition, there is both a light on the status indicators, as well as a function key, which indicates it is a “Windows Lock” key (the word Win inside a padlock is the symbol) and I have no idea what that is supposed to do either. When I have it turned on, the function keys don’t seem to work right and neither does the Windows modifier key to do, for example Win+R to open the Run dialog. The Function lock key does seem to work as needed but figuring out between the “Win”, “Mac”, “Win Lock” and “Fn Lock” keys which combination of modes would give me what I needed, was very challenging and cryptic. I finally got it set up how I need it (Function keys always acting as F1, F2, etc, I have no use for the brightness and volume shortcuts and do use the Fn keys for their original purposes often during development work), modifier keys working like any other keyboard for Win, Alt, etc… but I really don’t understand the design in this area.
Another down side is that the keyboard wants to slide all over the desk. The rear elevator feet have no anti slip protection at all, just hard plastic on the desk surface, and the front / top of the keyboard has some small rubber slip pads but the material is not grippy enough to keep it from wanting to walk all over the desk and slide away from me while I am using it. I would really like it to plant more firmly against the desk and stay put, but I am sure I can figure out a way to make that happen. Maybe some new stickier feet from the hardware store or a piece of tape or something.
There’s no LED to indicate the Scroll Lock status – I guess nobody much uses that anymore but for those who grew up with it it’s an annoying lack of traditionality even if it makes no difference for daily use.
And the Windows driver keeps wanting to pop notifications up on the screen whenever I type certain keys (like scroll lock for example) but the actual contents of that pop up are invisible. It’s a little blue rectangle on my screen that comes up for a second and then disappears but there are no visible words in the rectangle. Since I don’t use macro keys at all, I may uninstall the Perixx software and just let the Windows driver handle the keyboard in hopes of making that go away.
I feel like it’s smaller than the Microsoft keyboard I’m coming from in terms of individual key size and placement. I am feeling some cramping in my fingers after a day of heavy typing, which I didn’t feel on my old keyboard, and I feel like I have to scrunch my fingers closer together. The keys just feel smaller and more narrowly spaced than what I had before. It isn’t exactly unpleasant, it isn’t bad enough to give up on the keyboard and try another one, but I definitely feel like I’m having to adjust to a smaller, narrower footprint overall and I’m feeling it the most uncomfortably in the closeness of each finger to the next adjacent finger. Looking at the Microsoft keyboard visually and comparing them side by side, I don’t see that much apparent difference, it isn’t obvious or ostentatious, but in use, I’m feeling the difference and it’s not as good in that regard.
And finally – perhaps the biggest issue besides the fact that it wants to scoot and slide on the desk – this is personal taste but I would prefer a heavier key press. I am a very, very heavy handed typist. I type like I want to pound the keys through the desk into the floor and it’s never going to change. I actually liked the feel of the old membrane keyboard in the sense that it fought back against my fingers a little bit and gave me a satisfying sense of resistance as I pressed the keys and this new keyboard, by comparison, feels like it offers no resistance at all. I’m deliberately trying to touch more lightly so I don’t break it prematurely, and that’s adding to my finger cramped feeling as well. The keyboard is only offered in three switch “colors” right now and all three of them are the same resistance factor of 50 whatever-the-units-are. I would really like to have of the option of a clicky, but more force-resistive switch, up in the 70’s or 80’s I suspect would be more to my liking.
I pulled one of the keycaps up to see what was underneath and check I had been given the right color switches, and felt that the keycap to switch attachment seemed pretty flimsy looking. I used to regularly pull the keycaps off my old membrane keyboard to clean the grunge from underneath them, and on this keyboard, I’m afraid to do that because the plastic “hooks” on the key caps that attach to the switch look so delicate. Maybe this is common to this style of switches but it definitely gives me pause.
So… reservations and learning curve aside…. I was happy when I opened the box, I felt like I got my money’s worth, and here on day one of using it I don’t have any complaints so large that I’m regretting the purchase. I’ll update in 30 days if I feel differently. I was looking for a replacement for the Microsoft Natural series, and this isn’t perfect, but it’s the best I’ve tried so far.
Aunty Spud –
First mechanical keyboard for me, although son has been at me for a while to get one. My preference for wireless put me off. However, cord on this is long enough to easily move around my desk when I need to. Looks thin – but is sturdy, doesn’t slip around. Love the metal plate under the keys, which gives it the sturdy feel. I am used to a split keyboard and this has just the right amount of split and curve for me. I would love light up keys as I often work in low light, but I know where all my keys are so it’s not much of an issue (and not something I’ve ever had before). I use for transcription work – long hours on a daily basis, and am an old-school heavy typist (remnant from learning to touch type on a manual typewriter, yes I’m old :-D) Keys are very receptive and feel great to type on. Hopefully this will last me much longer than my last logi eco membrane keyboard, which I’m lucky if I got a year out of. Very happy with my purchase decision.