Hello and welcome back to the channel, my name’s Stef and in this video we’re going to be checking out the difference between two keyboards, the EWEADN GS75 and the AULA F75, and yes to be transparent, EWEADN has sponsored this video and yes, they told us to be objective and talk about the differences. So, let’s dive in.
Between the two taking a look at first glance, you can tell there’s a difference in shape with the GS75 being a lot more rounded in the corners, with a colour-themed rim. My GS75 here is in a baby blue-themed colourway which I don’t think is their best design, as the font is quite hard to see on the keys though there are five different colours to choose from and depending on eye-sight, your mileage with this blue and white variant may vary. Anyway, this colourway compared to my F75 here, I know which one I’m choosing, and that’s purely down to being able to see the keys on the F75, but I must say the GS75 does look more modern because of it. The housing though on the GS75 looks a lot chunkier can I say? It didn’t really affect typing performance or gaming performance between the two which is nice, but I did feel like I was able to keep my wrists a lot flatter on the desk with the F75, though both do come with rear feet-to-angle the boards for a more comfortable typing experience.

Both keyboards use cherry profile double shot keycaps – no surprise there because every mechanical keyboard seems to use them now. But in both cases, they look good and feel very nice to the touch. Both are 75% layouts so you retain your F keys, some function keys down the right, and both have a rotary knob in the top right for media functions, mainly volume and mute control, but in either case both are very similar though incremental movement on the GS75 is a lot firmer. Moving inside of both keyboards, this is probably where you’re going to see the biggest difference because audio profiles between the two are pretty different, just take a listen to this.

The GS75 produces more of a creamy sound compared to the F75 which I was told sounded a bit happier with added thock. The spacebar though on the GS75 is much nicer to listen to. This could come down to the extra noise-dampening layers that EWEADN are shouting about. The GS75 has six layers being Poron cotton, an IPXE underpad, a PET sound dampening pad, EPDM rubber and mold silicon pads, whereas the F75 has similar layers except for the EPDM rubber. Now is this the BIG thing AULA is missing out on? Probably not, and both keyboards do sound decent, though I must say I definitely prefer the sound of the GS75 here. Oh and both are gasket mounted and lubed and have Full N-Key Rollover and all that good stuff. And in terms of switches, of course, these are going to be different. The GS75 here uses EWEADN’s own Cream Pink switches and the F75 use Leobog Reapers though in both cases, different switches are available, and the switches are even hot-swappable on both keyboards.

The drivers for both keyboards are absolutely identical which is making me think the same software company developed and licenced the driver to both manufacturers, or both keyboards are made in exactly the same place. But I’m unsure if this is really the case. But yeah, you just can’t notice a difference between both bits of software. There is nothing fancy, though and once installed, you’re greeted with a pretty plain and simple driver that gives you the ability to save out different profiles, assign macros, design macros and change your RGB effects to either a solid colour, matching up to music or rainbow wave-like patterns. And finally, both keyboards feature tri-connectivity being a wired connection, or Bluetooth or 2.4GHz dongles though the GS75 does have a 5,000mAh battery, and the F75 has a 4,000mAh battery which is slightly lower. And both work well when it comes to performance inside of games.

So there you go. A comparison between two budget mechanical gaming keyboards, of which I must say I think in terms of sound profile, the GS75 edged out in front. Though comfort for typing? The AULA F75 I think with its slightly skinnier body takes the win. But still, they’re both nice to use. The blue and white version of the GS75 is priced at $69.99 though models do start at $49.99. The F75 on the other hand is priced on their website at $69.99. So no real difference in cost there unless you want the plainer version of the GS75. Either way, some nice keyboards overall and thanks again to EWEADN for sponsoring this video, their links to their stores will be in the description down below so make sure to check them out. And than you for watching this video.