£97.30 for 15 programmable buttons with graphics.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, that means there’s little reason to upgrade if you’ve already got a Stream Deck - but it does mean that the Stream Deck MK.2 is just a little bit nicer than the older model if you’re buying one for the first time. Those replacement faceplates arepretty neat, too.

For me, the Stream Deck is cool because it fulfills, in a way, a promise that was made many years ago when I was first starting in the industry. There was akeyboard concept called the Optimus, where instead of having letters permanently etched into the keycaps, it had tiny colour screens behind each key. With a full-size layout, that meant more than a hundred screens - or more accuarately, one screen subdivided into a hundred sections - and fed through transparent keycaps.

It sounded incredible, but the retail keyboards that followed existed in tiny numbers and initially cost $1600. They were also rather rubbish to use, with no real tactile feedback to speak of - it very much felt you were pushing a giant piece of plastic along a short tunnel, which you kind of were. The software experience was also dire, requiring time-consuming configuration to set each key’s purpose and legend one-by-one. Later keyboards were smaller and cost less, but the concept had already shown to be a practical failure by this point.

A decade later, and the Stream Deck is an accepted part of the furniture in the streaming space, costing an acceptable amount of money with software that can actually support it. It’s been a cool progression to witness, and makes the £97 discounted price here seem a little more reasonable…