Apple fans who use the Apple Magic Keyboard will love using the Keychron K1, the wireless keyboard that the Cupertino giant should have made but never did.

Apple users who like using the Apple Magic Keyboard will like the Keychron K1 more, a type of wireless keyboard that never entered the minds of engineers at Apple. The slim design and comfort that the Keychron offers to users are enough to make anyone want one. With its aesthetic appeal and the ease, it offers users, you might wonder why Apple never made a device similar to the Keychron K1 wireless keyboard.

Keychron is a known mechanical keyboard maker. Its keyboards feature several design forms and customization options, with the Keychron K2 emerging as the most popular among them. Users who want to try the Keychron K1 may opt for its 87-key or 104-key configurations, as well as the RGB or white backlight options. Apple fans used to the Chiclet-style keys of the Apple Magic Keyboard will find great satisfaction if they upgrade to the Keychron K1 wireless keyboard. Many users are now wondering why Apple did not create a similar design as the Keychron K1 wireless keyboard.

The Keychron K1 wireless keyboard has several iterations, with version 4 as an iterative and welcome update to the keyboard's version 3. The new Keychron K1 wireless keyboard has feature enhancements like curved keycaps with new color combinations, Bluetooth 5.1, and a caps lock indicator for the 87-key wireless keyboard. The Keychron K1 has many design elements and enhancements similar to the Apple Magic Keyboard, prompting many to think why Apple never made one like it.

With thickness measuring at only 18mm, the slim aluminum body of the Keychron K1 slightly inclines at the base, making the keys feel closer to the users' fingers as they reach out to type. The keys themselves have lower travel and feel, which appear similar to the Chiclet keys on Apple Magic Keyboards. Industry observers say that with such similarities, Apple could have made a keyboard like the Keychron K1 wireless keyboard and it would have been widely accepted by users. The sound produced when typing on Keychron K1 is not too loud and users would feel the key slightly mushy, but it does not have a negative impact on the users' typing experience.

While Keychron K1 wireless keyboard is low-profile, it has the right feel and feedback expected of its type. The keys, which curve slightly to make your fingers feel better as you touch-type, are half-height. The keycaps also appear to float above the case of the keyboard, with a transparent section that lets light shine through from below. With enhancements and feel similar to Apple devices, industry observers opine that the Cupertino tech giant should have made one like it, but never did. With the increasing popularity of the Keychron K1 wireless keyboard, many believe it will soon rise to become an important addition to Apple devices.