The KeyboardWe listened to feedback on the G53/73 and changed the keyboard last year with the G74SX. The brushed aluminum is much stronger and gives it a far more attractive look. The G5s follow this design, but now use a new, lighter color that gets extended off the end and wrapped around the edges. Plus, this Chiclet style is easier to clean because it’s entirely flat whereas the G53 was slightly recessed. Of course it still has backlit keys too.
Under the arrow keys there’s a new cut-out on the bottom to give more space for your fingers, so they don’t hit the wrist-pad edge. The gap between the arrow keys and the wrist-pad edge now matches gap used by the rest of the bottom keys, so it’s subtly more visually appealing. We wanted to balance the clean horizontal lines with additions of dynamic style that highlights these areas. The wrist-pad is also more like the G3s – it uses dual-injection rubber that’s slightly coarser than the very smooth G74SX, because customers said they preferred it, so we went back to it.
G75VW arrow keys and wrist-padAnother area we looked at was the WASD keys as it goes without saying these are very significant for gamers. We added a very discreet dot on the W key so you can find it without ever looking away from your screen. You won’t confuse it with the F and J key dents either, as their extrusions are rectangular and the W is circular. Another reason for this is that we wanted to keep it very visually clean and minimalist, and simply because gamers don’t need to be visually told ‘hey these colored keys are the WASD’; that’s redundant.
G75VW W key nippleThe TouchpadYou can see the touchpad has printed brackets at both edges to highlight to users that inside this is the active area. We found some users feel for the edge with their thumb or finger and stay just inside it, causing the mouse response to be inconsistent. This design we feel also fits the gaming theme too – like a HUD.
At a time when other notebooks are adopting the single click pad with no buttons, we feel the ROG series should be the exception, as gamers need the feedback of real buttons. For the touchpad buttons we worked with the mechanical and UE (user experience) teams to test many varieties of pressure and click styles, while also maintaining durability. We ended up with a ‘scissor’ action spring to give the buttons a solid feeling with more definition.
The DisplayOn the G53SX we tried to make the area around the LCD a clean design without using rubber, which is also why the keyboard is recessed: so it doesn’t damage the display when it was closed. However, with the G74SX and its flat keyboard we had to put the four rubber nipples around the display, because it’s larger panel made it more vulnerable to damage. We’ve managed to get the G5 down to just two though, with offsets elsewhere like the rubber palm rest. Actually, we initially tried just the rubber rest at first, but it didn’t pass all the internal stress tests so we opted to add two to make sure.
G75VW keyboard, power button and ROG buttonthe stereo speakers, but the superseding goal to make the G5 slimmer killed this idea. In the end it had to be flat, which meant we also had to also shift the speakers within the chassis as well.